Last night I had genuinely not expected to wake up
to a Britain in the first stages of national independence - and nor did
many others. Many leading Leave activists were predicting a Leave vote
of 40-45%. Although I was not so negative, I thought Remain would push
us down to 47-48%, respectable but, as Harry Oppenheimer once said, '51% is
control'.
On the Left, my friend on the Morning Star editorial
team was getting angry at what he thought were lost
opportunities and the capture of the debate over 'free movement of
labour' by the Right. Later that evening on the
BBC, it was heartening to see John McDonnell at least
try to address this concern where no Kinnockite or Blairite would - perhaps there is hope for the Labour Party after all.
I dropped in on the Leave.EU Post-Referendum Party and nearly the
first person I saw was a chipper Arron Banks who told me that private
polling of 10,000 people had predicted a 52:48 vote in favour of Leave
and that the swing would be produced by an angry industrial or
post-industrial Northern working class but that London and Scotland
would counter that somewhat. He turned out to be right.
I kept an open
mind but no one else I spoke to at the event (I left early to 'be with
my family' at what might have been the political equivalent of armageddon)
took the poll seriously. This is how gloomy Leave had become after the
onslaught of the entire Liberal Establishment, the manipulations of
Project Fear, the viciousness of the Labour-driven Project Slander and
the calculated sentiment of Project Vigil.
And then I awoke (my
family remained for the duration) to victory and to the prospect of
sunshine, a day off and a visit to the cinema to see the afternoon
performance of 'Independence Day: Resurgence'. What had originally been
an ironic consolation will now be an unalloyed pleasure regardless of
the quality of the film. Suddenly all the planning for the
consequences of defeat was no longer required. There was only one task
ahead - to 'defend the revolution' by any means necessary.
Since Remain
had behaved so appallingly in the last ten days of the Campaign and
still appears not to get (at least on its Left) why it had lost, we
Leavers must act without any weakness of will or false attempt at a
reconciliation with people who have bullied and lied but, above all,
shown utter cavalier lack of respect for the independent
decision-making powers of the British people. The people who had been
ignored and treated with disrespect had fought back. If Labour does not
learn its lesson (and it shows every sign of being incapable of doing
so) what happened in Scotland will happen to in the North of England.
There is no reason to explore the reasons why Remain lost (because, let
us be clear, Leave only won because Remain lost) but only to note that
the alienation of the Leave Left started and ended with an atmosphere of
bullying and disrespect that was evident as early as April. Left
Leavers will not be easily cowed now. But there is something more
disturbing to note - Leave managed to tip itself over the edge because
of the organisational drive and activist dynamism of UKIP.
That
is just a fact on the ground. The irresponsible abandonment of the
Northern post-industrial working class by the Labour Party (John Mann
was visibly angry about this on the BBC last night very early in the
game) had handed it over not to wet liberal middle class patronising
bastards in the centre but to national populists. National populists are
democrats but they can and will ally with similar forces across Europe
who are speaking for the abandoned classes of Europe
while the middle classes enrich themselves on globalisation. And these
democratic forces are not socialist or liberal, some may not even be democratic.
That is the real
change to consider - the utter failure of the Radical Centre, whether
Kinnockite, Blairite, Liberal Democrat (long since busted) or
Cameronian to share power with the mass, bring prosperity, share
difficulties fairly and evenly but, above all, not to disrepect a
working class they clearly despise openly and sometimes humiliate. The
failure of the Left has been the opportunity for the Right. Remain's debacle is down to the soft and liberal left, not the
Right which is only learning to be politically effective year by year
because the Left is run by fools.
The revolution (so to speak)
is not the independence of Britain (which is simply a restoration of the
right order of things and an opportunity to make change happen) but the
potential for the overturning of a failed and arrogant elite. This elite presumed to
speak for the people despite the dodginess of its hold over democratic
procedures. Even now prominent Centrists regret the very fact of a referendum because
it came up with the 'wrong result'. Now that is arrogance!
Democracy is an absolute
value and yet the democrats are now on the Right. This should worry everyone
who claims to liberal or socialist values. It is the 'real' Left that
has to organise now both to challenge UKIP within the framework of
national independence (for the sake of liberalism and socialism) yet, if
necessary, to work alongside the independence Right against the Radical
Centre (for the sake of democracy) and either to force Labour to return to
its roots or get out of the way.
Some recognition is due to Left
activists who fought the good fight against the odds but picking out
names would be invidious. They know who they are. They would have
fought on even if Remain had inveigled itself to victory through its
command of the media and government. Life is good today but it is only
the first day of a struggle to make the prospect of a paper independence
a material reality that will bring a fairer Britain.
Friday, 24 June 2016
Wednesday, 22 June 2016
Final Thoughts on the Brexit Vote Tomorrow
The vote is now
impossible to predict. For example, it is going to be extremely wet
tomorrow and that will put off a lot of wobblers on both sides,
Similarly, many perfectly decent but unsophisticated middle middle class
people see a world of disorder and will conservatively vote for what
they think will maintain order (Remain): such a desire for order amidst
disorder led to the interwar errors.
On the other side, many working class people and entrepreneurial small business people may see this in cultural terms as the last stand of their culture not against immigrants but against the administrative middle classes and so be the more motivated to vote.
We could go on ... I doubt whether the rather depressing and slightly unpleasant appropriation of a dead person for political purposes will make much difference, irritating as many voters as it mobilises. The economic arguments have long since reached the limit of their power.
It is now down to instinct and sentiment and brute self-interest albeit with the so-called 'educated' middle class desperately trying to use a selection of pseudo-rational arguments to explain their choice to themselves.
If we were to characterise the underlying structure of the conflict, it would be that, although highly complex with many different strands, it is essentially the conflict between a conservative desire for an order to be supplied by an ostensibly liberal-minded administrative class in uncertain times (Remain) and a more radical instinct for change because the existing structures are no longer viable even if those who want change have different prescriptions about what to do next (Leave).
The Remainers constantly call for a 'plan' about 'what to do next' utterly missing the point that the various administrative classes of late liberal capitalist democracy have themselves failed to bring order under conditions of globalisation. Their plan is just 'more of the same' only more intensively applied.
This leaves the population with only two alternatives which the two sides now represent. The first choice is for an intensification of effort by the administrative classes to regulate disorder out of existence along a middling path (the 'plan') despite the constantly growing cracks in the paradigm.
The second choice is to step back and construct geographical and policy fire breaks against the gathering storm to protect the population and bring the administrative classes under control, either through markets or democracy or both. Either choice is broadly coherent but coherence is not necessarily the same as rational since national socialism had its coherence.
The question is whether the administrative classes have the authority and competence to manage vast numbers of humanity each with their own special interests and world views and whether the 'fire break' method can actually work against the sheer weight of forces emerging as a result of an over-rapid globalisation.
I take a Leave position because my analysis is that the administrative classes are faced with such an impossible task that they can only turn to increased surveillance, taxation (to support themselves) and even repression.
The 'fire break' approach gives nation states' and indeed communities at a lower level in the political food chain reserve powers to make decisions in their own interest, analogous to the personal autonomy necessary to make effective private and family decisions. It is really the last chance saloon, not only for stability but for the successful adaptation of populations to a more managed globalisation over a longer period of time.
The point, if one is concerned with stability, is that the system is paradoxically being destabilised by its own attempt to create a stable system. A new and more flexible and adaptable approach to the system is required. The stresses and strains within the current system are 'tectonic'. If they are not released gently, like economic crises, they will release themselves in a bigger explosion later.
What many Remainers are (I believe) not understanding is that the British Leave proposal is actually rather conservative. It detaches Britain from the system sufficiently to ensure adjustment but actually retains nearly all the existing links - unless the European Union itself seeks a confrontation (which is unlikely). It also permits re-engagement later on European reform by Europeans for Europeans.
Re-immersion in the European Union appears to solve the problem in one country but it has no effect (other than to delay the day of reckoning) on the total system, not even to improve its position. The total system continues its administrative-led trajectory towards increased disorder, made worse by the patching up being done to try to ensure the British do not leave.
So, a vote either way is problematic but a vote for Remain ironically increases the very disorder that its proponents most fear. The act of voting Remain merely pushes a 'crisis of order' forward by a few years (perhaps even months). The fundamentals say that the immersion of the nation must eventually be much deeper in an integrated European Union than many Remain voters actually want.
Perhaps Remainers will come to want an enhanced administrative authority over them as crises mount and economic prosperity fails to materialise but, if they do, then democracy will be little more than handing over power to the political wing of the administrative and managerial classes.
And when the immersion has finally taken place in full, they, as citizens, will either be part of the administrative and managerial class or subject to its desperate attempts to manage mounting entropy. Being a subject of the European administrative class is really not much better than being a subject of the pre-modern Crown.
On the other side, many working class people and entrepreneurial small business people may see this in cultural terms as the last stand of their culture not against immigrants but against the administrative middle classes and so be the more motivated to vote.
We could go on ... I doubt whether the rather depressing and slightly unpleasant appropriation of a dead person for political purposes will make much difference, irritating as many voters as it mobilises. The economic arguments have long since reached the limit of their power.
It is now down to instinct and sentiment and brute self-interest albeit with the so-called 'educated' middle class desperately trying to use a selection of pseudo-rational arguments to explain their choice to themselves.
If we were to characterise the underlying structure of the conflict, it would be that, although highly complex with many different strands, it is essentially the conflict between a conservative desire for an order to be supplied by an ostensibly liberal-minded administrative class in uncertain times (Remain) and a more radical instinct for change because the existing structures are no longer viable even if those who want change have different prescriptions about what to do next (Leave).
The Remainers constantly call for a 'plan' about 'what to do next' utterly missing the point that the various administrative classes of late liberal capitalist democracy have themselves failed to bring order under conditions of globalisation. Their plan is just 'more of the same' only more intensively applied.
This leaves the population with only two alternatives which the two sides now represent. The first choice is for an intensification of effort by the administrative classes to regulate disorder out of existence along a middling path (the 'plan') despite the constantly growing cracks in the paradigm.
The second choice is to step back and construct geographical and policy fire breaks against the gathering storm to protect the population and bring the administrative classes under control, either through markets or democracy or both. Either choice is broadly coherent but coherence is not necessarily the same as rational since national socialism had its coherence.
The question is whether the administrative classes have the authority and competence to manage vast numbers of humanity each with their own special interests and world views and whether the 'fire break' method can actually work against the sheer weight of forces emerging as a result of an over-rapid globalisation.
I take a Leave position because my analysis is that the administrative classes are faced with such an impossible task that they can only turn to increased surveillance, taxation (to support themselves) and even repression.
The 'fire break' approach gives nation states' and indeed communities at a lower level in the political food chain reserve powers to make decisions in their own interest, analogous to the personal autonomy necessary to make effective private and family decisions. It is really the last chance saloon, not only for stability but for the successful adaptation of populations to a more managed globalisation over a longer period of time.
The point, if one is concerned with stability, is that the system is paradoxically being destabilised by its own attempt to create a stable system. A new and more flexible and adaptable approach to the system is required. The stresses and strains within the current system are 'tectonic'. If they are not released gently, like economic crises, they will release themselves in a bigger explosion later.
What many Remainers are (I believe) not understanding is that the British Leave proposal is actually rather conservative. It detaches Britain from the system sufficiently to ensure adjustment but actually retains nearly all the existing links - unless the European Union itself seeks a confrontation (which is unlikely). It also permits re-engagement later on European reform by Europeans for Europeans.
Re-immersion in the European Union appears to solve the problem in one country but it has no effect (other than to delay the day of reckoning) on the total system, not even to improve its position. The total system continues its administrative-led trajectory towards increased disorder, made worse by the patching up being done to try to ensure the British do not leave.
So, a vote either way is problematic but a vote for Remain ironically increases the very disorder that its proponents most fear. The act of voting Remain merely pushes a 'crisis of order' forward by a few years (perhaps even months). The fundamentals say that the immersion of the nation must eventually be much deeper in an integrated European Union than many Remain voters actually want.
Perhaps Remainers will come to want an enhanced administrative authority over them as crises mount and economic prosperity fails to materialise but, if they do, then democracy will be little more than handing over power to the political wing of the administrative and managerial classes.
And when the immersion has finally taken place in full, they, as citizens, will either be part of the administrative and managerial class or subject to its desperate attempts to manage mounting entropy. Being a subject of the European administrative class is really not much better than being a subject of the pre-modern Crown.
Tuesday, 21 June 2016
Panel Contribution - Initiatives of Change Conference: The Middle East Migration Crisis - Genesis and Responses – London, June 20th, 2016
Seven minutes is not a great deal of time to provide a creative solution to our biggest current challenge – the mass migration not only of the dispossessed by war but of the global poor under conditions of globalisation. The crisis is not just one of the Middle East and Europe. It is a global crisis. I have time just to propose one big political shift of emphasis.
TPPR is primarily an adviser to the private sector on the
risk implications of changes in our political situation. We have been much
preoccupied with Brexit which comes to a head on Thursday. The Brexit Debate
contains important lessons for us. Basically, the liberal middle classes want
idealism from their leafy suburbs while many working class people would like
some compassion directed at their situation instead.
The cultural idealist in the metropolis who has done well
out of globalisation has suddenly faced a revolt from half his fellows. The
latter have realised, perhaps too late, that they have one shot at recovering
their old cultural status before, not migrants, but the liberal middle classes
in all its manifestations confirm their minority status in their own land.
Migration is too often framed as one of humanitarian duty
against racism and xenophobia. But it is also one of class, of classes that see
themselves (whether petit-bourgeois East Coast shopkeeper or working class
Northerner) not merely as the general losers in the globalisation game but as
on the edge of permanent insecurity and exploitation because of it.
The numbers of migrants is always exaggerated in political
discourse but this truth is often used as an excuse to try to dismiss
complainants as irrational or vicious. In fact, their protest is rational on
several grounds.
First, the flow of migrants is increasing. They are not
fools in the belief that assimilated migrants will come to be a permanent
voting bloc working with the liberal-minded middle classes to steer resources
ever more in the direction of those with the political power. The fears are
anticipatory and correct.
Second, they see free movement of labour, in association
with the capture of their political movements by the middle classes, including
the official parties of the Left, as a means of atomising them and driving
down wage rates but it also observably increases competition for scarce
resources especially housing.
Many working people see what happens when unscrupulous
exploitative business takes up the opportunity of cheap labour without having
to invest in social infrastructure, the social capital needed to sustain the
communities into which the migrants are also inserted without much social
support other than the family, clan or tribe.
Third, the average working class reaction to people from
faraway places and different cultures begins with being tolerant (although, of
course there are a minority of fascists in these communities) but resentment
grows – yet not necessarily because of the migrant …
When the dominant culture – the world of government and the
BBC to oversimplify – engages in what the local community thinks of as an
intrusive positive discrimination in which its own history and values are
disrespected, it is this disrespect, anticipatory of humiliation, which becomes
the problem.
The best of the Left has always tried to point out that an
exploited white working class person and an exploited migrant have the same
problem at heart. In general, the British working class has not been averse to
this. Many of these issues would certainly be less salient if the globalising
system had not resulted in an economic crash in 2008 in which the higher you
were up the middle class food chain, the less likely you were to be hurt.
But now we are in the economic doldrums. Large numbers of
people feel disrespected and under threat. Nor are they are wrong in seeing
their problems increase if cheap labour is to be the engine that tries to keep
a failing economic system alive until the next innovation-led economic cycle
many years away.
And the creative solution to the long term problem of
refugee and even economic migrant acceptability? We step back and give
ourselves a three, perhaps even seven, year breathing space in which the West
allows itself to put up some sufficient short term barriers to totally free
movement of labour in order to buy itself valuable time.
Why? To allow the human-all-too-human to adjust to new
conditions and prepare for the next economic cycle. To reconstruct a culture of
respect for the ordinary person whether native or migrant. To put idealistic
liberals back in their box as the dominant political species. To put in place
the necessary managed system of migration control.
The positive results would be a breathing space for more
toleration, less populism, more acceptance of those migrants who are here, the
ending of an exploitative labour market, the political consensus for vital
social investment overseas and the eventual widespread social acceptance of a
restoration of moderate managed migration with an adequate infrastructure in
place to handle it.
Labels:
Assimilation,
Brexit,
Class,
European Referendum,
Free Movement,
Infrastructure,
Labour,
Migration,
Populism,
Racism,
Refugees,
Toleration,
TPPR,
UK Politics,
Xenophobia
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