Neil Clark – Public Reading Rooms https://prruk.org/ The Politics of Art and Vice Versa Tue, 09 Jan 2018 18:19:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 To prevent fires like Grenfell, the UK government needs to stop lighting fires abroad https://prruk.org/to-prevent-fires-like-grenfell-tower-the-uk-government-needs-to-stop-lighting-fires-abroad/ Sun, 18 Jun 2017 17:08:56 +0000 http://www.prruk.org/?p=4176 One of the main reasons austerity is being imposed on the general public is precisely to free up funds for foreign interventions.

Source: RT

The Grenfell Tower fire in West London, which has killed at least 58 people and left many more homeless, is a shocking indictment of the UK’s neoliberal/neo-conservative Establishment and their warped priorities.

We don’t have, it seems, enough money for all tower blocks in the country to be fitted with sprinklers and for adequate fire safety measures to be in place, but we do have enough to set fire to a series of secular Middle East countries that the Western elites and the endless war lobby want ‘regime-changed’.

Just compare the very modest sums that would have ensured the safety of the mainly working-class inhabitants of Grenfell Tower with how much the British government has squandered on wars against ‘target states’ in recent years. The London Fire Brigades Union tweeted that ‘Nobody has ever died in a fire in the UK in a property with an effective fire sprinkler system fitted’.

The cost of fitting Grenfell Tower with sprinklers has been put at around £200,000 by the industry’s trade body. £200,000 to protect 600 people’s lives? Nah, too expensive, mate, in neoliberal/neoconservative Britain. We’ve got other more ‘important’ things to spend our money on – like backing anti-Assad ‘rebels’ in Syria, which in 2013 alone the UK government proudly announced would receive £13.2m from the taxpayer.

The shocking truth is that public safety at home has been sacrificed for the pursuance of neocon objectives abroad.

Looking at the national picture, there are an estimated 4,000 tower blocks in the UK without sprinkler systems. By my math that means it would cost around £800m to make all of them safe. If that seems a hefty amount, then put that figure alongside the £37bn the war in Afghanistan has cost British taxpayers up to May 2013 – a sum equivalent to £2,000 per household.

Or the £205bn to renew and maintain Trident, which, in the words of journalist Peter Hitchens (a conservative, not a leftist), “protects us from an enemy we don’t have in a war which ended 26 years ago.”

Then there is the issue of cladding. The decision to clad the building was taken, at least in part, to improve the view of wealthier neighbors. There was a choice of two types of cladding – one flammable- and the other fire-resistant. The fire-resistant one was £2 per meter more expensive. And guess which one was chosen? Yup, the flammable one.

It was revealed this week that the private firm that fitted the flammable cladding for £2.6m in 2016 put £2.5m into tax schemes before part of the company went bust.

Back in the pre-neoliberal, neoconservative era, refurbishments would have been done ‘in-house’ by the council. But Thatcherism changed all that. Local authorities have seen their funding from central government cut and have opted out of a wide range of activities they once carried out. Outsourcing has become an obsession, which makes it oh-so-easy to pass the blame on to someone else when things go wrong. Which they often do.

Tory-controlled Kensington and Chelsea Council handed over the running of its housing stock to Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organization (KCTMO). KCTMO commissioned a French-owned firm to manage the Grenfell Tower refurbishment project.

KCTMO then signed an £8.6m contract with a private company named Rydon (who made a profit of £14.3m last year) to carry out the work. Rydon then sub-contracted another firm, Harley Facades, to install the cladding. Harley got the insulation for their panels from another firm, who in turn are owned by a French company. The Reynobond cladding used was made by another company in America.

Confused? You’re not the only one. When a director of Rydon was asked in a television interview which cladding was used he couldn’t give an answer.

Another major scandal is the closure of fire stations. Back in 1975, a social-democratic era where public money was spent on things the public really needed (how radical was that!), there were 114 fire stations in London and 546 fire-fighting vehicles. The respective numbers today are 103 and 157, for a city whose population has grown from 7.3m in 1975 to around 8.6m today.

In January 2014, no fewer than 10 fire stations in the capital were closed due to ‘budget cuts’.

When the then Mayor Boris Johnson was challenged about these closures in the London Assembly, his thoughtful, measured response to his interlocutor was, ‘Oh, get stuffed’.

The penny-pinching architects of austerity at home, are – surprise, surprise – the most expansive, gung-ho warmongers abroad.

Just one day before the Grenfell tragedy, the BBC was reporting how George Osborne, the millionaire former Chancellor of the Exchequer, was urging the government not to change course on austerity.

“Talk of ‘an end to austerity’ is code for ‘we’re going to allow the deficit to rise, and we don’t care”, an editorial in Osborne’s Evening Standard declared.

Yet, strangely enough the ‘thrifty’ Mr Osborne didn’t seem to care too much about the deficit himself when he was pleading with MPs to back the bombing of Syrian government forces in the summer of 2013.

In 2015, still sulking, he described the decision of Parliamentarians not to support all-out war against Syria as “one of the worst decisions the House of Commons has ever made.” If Parliament had sanctioned war four years ago, it would have cost us a small fortune – as well as greatly aiding the cause of al-Qaeda and their affiliates. But hey, George, the ‘architect of austerity’ was up for it.

Like other Establishment hawks, the ex-Chancellor only supports austerity when it suits him. He likes to play Ebeneezer Scrooge when it comes to cutting services that ordinary folks rely on at home, but morphs into a blank cheque-book waving, big-spending Keynesian when it comes to military interventions in the Middle East. We mustn’t forget Libya, either.

Britain’s prominent role in the toppling of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 cost the UK taxpayer at least £320m.

This was at a time when myself and many others were fighting to save public libraries from closure due to government cuts to local authorities. Of course, the cost to the public of destroying the country with the highest Human Development Index in Africa greatly exceeds the money Cameron and Osborne spent seven years ago. The war (and other neocon military adventures) has caused a refugee crisis of Biblical proportions – as well as greatly increasing the terror threat at home, as we saw from the Manchester Arena killings. The Manchester bomber Salman Abedi, lest we forget was – as historian Mark Curtis notes – part of an Libyan extremist group which was regarded favorably by the UK elites as a proxy militia to oust Gaddafi.

Abedi is thought to have returned from Libya – now a failed state and a huge jihadist training camp – only a few days before he carried out his deadly attack.

There are those who say that with Jeremy Corbyn so close to power, the left should concentrate on domestic policy and leave foreign policy well alone. But the two are inextricably linked. Now at last people are beginning to make the connection between the huge amounts spent on wars and ’liberal interventions’ and cuts to vital services at home.

There’s been a lot of media hot-air and commentariat wind-baggery since the Grenfell fire, but there was a real ‘Emperor’s New Clothes’ moment when a survivor told a television interviewer “What really upsets me is the fact that last year when it came to voting to bombing Syria you can see that the government has got the money to do stuff like that for war and send off planes and missiles, they’ve got the technology for that but they haven’t got the technology to save the people in London.”

And that’s a deliberate political choice.

One of the main reasons austerity is being imposed on the general public is precisely to free up funds for foreign interventions. The endless war lobby need to cut spending on things we want – like public libraries, fire stations, sprinklers on tower blocks, and a properly funded NHS – in order to pay for the things they want – like bombing Libya back to the Stone Age, keeping the conflict in Syria going for as long as possible, and for military build-ups on Russia’s borders.

They want to use our money for warfare, and for toppling governments that don’t do their bidding; we want it spent on our welfare. Never in a hundred years has the conflict of interest between the elite and the people been so stark.

To put fires out in Britain, we need to stop lighting them overseas. And the only regime change ordinary folk should be interested in is the one that’s urgently needed at home.

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‘Fake news’ and ‘post-truth politics’ blamed for Trump and Brexit. You couldn’t make it up. But they did https://prruk.org/fake-news-and-post-truth-politics-you-couldnt-make-it-up-but-they-did/ Tue, 22 Nov 2016 19:55:42 +0000 http://www.prruk.org/?p=2150 Those warning of the dangers of ‘fake news’ and ‘post-truth politics’ have been the biggest peddlers of ‘fake news’ and ‘post-truth politics’.

Source: RT

The Oxford Dictionaries have named ‘post-truth’ as the word of the year. ‘Fake news’ and ‘post-truth’ politics have been blamed for both the Brexit vote in the UK and the victory of Donald Trump in America.

It seems the uneducated plebs are falling for ’fake news’ they read in ’new media’ and the lies of dreadful rabble-rousing populist politicians who are relying on people’s emotions, instead of ’objective facts,’ to get votes. It’s all terribly worrying and poses a dire threat to Western civilization as we know it.

Well, forgive me for laughing out loud. For this establishment ‘fake news’/’post-truth politics’ concern is the funniest thing I’ve come across in politics since Lord Jenkins of Hillhead, the very grand Chancellor of the University of Oxford, repeatedly called distinguished Sheldonian guest Mikhail Gorbachev, “Mr. Brezhnev.”

Why is it so hilarious? Because the people and the outlets warning of the dangers of ‘fake news’ and ‘post-truth politics’ have been the biggest peddlers of ‘fake news’ and ‘post-truth politics’ out there. It’s like receiving lectures on the immorality of bootlegging from Al Capone or being told to sit up straight by the Hunchback of Notre Dame.

Without a doubt the best, or rather the worst example of ‘fake news’ in the last 25 years or so, was the neocon lie that Iraq had WMDs in 2002/3. That wasn’t peddled by ‘obscure bloggers’ and ‘new media,’ but by mainstream Western politicians, from ‘mainstream’ political parties, establishment-approved ‘experts’ on the BBC/ITV/CNN, etc., and Op-ed columnists in ‘serious’ and ‘respectable’ media outlets.

There was absolutely no evidence that Saddam possessed WMDs. The story was complete and utter BS. Yet this fake news dominated the headlines for months in 2002/3 and led to an illegal invasion in which many people lost their lives. Unlike today’s manufactured ‘fake news’ hysteria the Iraq war was no joke. An entire country was destroyed.

And guess what? Those who pushed the ‘Iraq has WMDs line’ are now coming on television to express their concern over ‘fake news’!

John Hilley notes“The BBC even had Alastair Campbell (Tony Blair’s spin doctor), in the studio defending the term ‘post-truth’ as a way of exposing the ‘dangers’ of ‘fake news.'”

Campbell stated: “It’s acknowledging that politics, which has always been rough, has moved to a different phase where politicians who lie now appear to get rewarded for it.” (BBC2 Jeremy Vine Show, 16/11/2016).

What might Orwell have said about Campbell, master spinner and Blairite warmonger, sitting inside the BBC being rewarded for his thoughts on ‘post-truth and ‘fake news?’ Hilley asks.

Once again, I’m sure old George is spinning in his grave in Sutton Courtenay.

Then there’s that serial warmonger Bernard-Henri Levy. The Sunday Telegraph today told us in its headlines: ‘Leading French philosopher: Marine Le Pen may win election as people have lost interest in whether politicians tell the truth.’

Oh, the irony!

Because if the French people really have ‘lost interest in whether politicians tell the truth,’ Henri-Levy and his fellow liberal interventionist ‘regime changers’ have got a lot to do with it.
Think back to the war against Libya, which the ‘leading French philosopher’ lobbied hard for. To sell the war to the Western public, we were told that Muammar Gaddafi was about to commit a ‘Srebrenica-style’ massacre in Benghazi. Media Lens noted the claims that were made at the time.

But again it was a load of ‘rollocks.’ Five years after Libya, like Iraq before it, had been destroyed by Western ‘interventionists,’ a report of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Commons declared: “the proposition that Muammar Gaddafi would have ordered the massacre of civilians in Benghazi was not supported by the available evidence.”

It wasn’t the only claim made about Libya by Western politicians that was ‘not supported by the available evidence.’ In February 2011, UK Foreign Secretary William Hague insisted that he had seen ‘information’ which suggested that Gaddafi was on his way to Venezuela. An unnamed ‘diplomat’ said that this was ‘credible information.’ But it wasn’t. It was the same old fake news that we get every time the Western elites are trying to achieve ‘regime change.’

In April 2011 we heard that the devilish Gaddafi (who had not, after all, fled to Caracas), was supplying his troops with Viagra “to encourage mass rape.”

“Gaddafi’s security forces and other groups in the region are trying to divide the people by using violence against women and rape as tools of war, and the United States condemns this in the strongest possible terms,” declared Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, whose supporters are now complaining about ‘post-truth politics.

Again, no evidence was put forward for the Viagra/mass rape claim and, surprise, surprise, none was ever found.

A clear pattern can be discerned. To get public support for its illegal regime change wars, the Western establishment energetically promotes a number of ‘fake news’ stories. These stories are usually reported unquestioningly in ‘respectable’ outlets and are regularly cited by neocon/liberal interventionist commentators as a reason for taking action against the target state. ‘Anonymous’ sources feature heavily in these stories, which like MI6’s ‘Operation Mass Appeal’ are often planted by the security services.

Meanwhile, people’s emotions are shamelessly played upon by the ‘something must be done’ brigade of ‘liberal’ laptop bombardiers, the same crowd, note well, who accuse ‘populist’ politicians of ignoring ‘objective facts’ and playing on people’s emotions.

The fake news continues while the regime change operation is ongoing. After its over, we’re all meant to forget about the false stories we were fed and focus on the next ’New Hitler’ who needs to be dealt with. In 2011, it was the despicable Gaddafi, now it’s the despicable Assad and the despicable Putin who we’re told: “have to be stopped.”

The term ‘post-truth’ politics implies there was a time when politics was truthful. I doubt if that ever was the case, but certainly in the last 25 years, thanks to the influence of neocons and ‘liberal interventionists’, the lies have been off the scale. Remember the Niger uranium forgeries? And Saddam’s horrific ‘People Shredder‘?

And before the Iraq war, we had the ‘humanitarian’ NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, where again fake news dominated. US Defense Secretary William Cohen claimed“about 100,000 military-aged” Kosovan Albanians were missing… “they may have been murdered.”

As John Pilger reminded us, “Kosovo, the site of a genocide that never was, is now a violent “free market” in drugs and prostitution.”

It wasn’t the only lurid claim that was made to sell the war. But again the ‘genocide’ and hundreds of thousands killed stories were false, as a UN court itself ruled in 2001.

Fake news also featured heavily in the neocon campaign to get Iran sanctioned for an entirely unproven nuclear weapons program. It’s dominated the coverage of recent events in Ukraine, with Russia’s non-existent ‘invasion of Ukraine’ routinely referred to as a fact. The conflict in Syria too has been marked by ‘fake news,’ and theories being reported as if they’re 100 percent proven. How many times have you read that “Assad gassed his own people” at Ghouta in 2013, even though we still don’t know for sure who carried out the attack?

If it’s ‘official enemies’ we’re talking about ‘fact-checking’ and citing sources isn’t all that important for those who pounce on a mere typo if it’s an anti-war writer who’s making a claim.

Now, the same people who have disseminated fake news for so long and who are still, even after Iraq and Libya, embedded in the West’s political and media establishments, are lashing out because they no longer control the narrative as they used to. The public is getting their news from a much wider variety of sources and voting for ‘populist,’ i.e., non-neocon/liberal interventionist-anointed candidates/parties at elections.

Instead of admitting that it’s their ’fake news’ and ‘post-truth politics’ which has caused people to switch off from establishment media and to stop voting for status quo candidates, the endless war lobby has the effrontery to accuse others of the things they have been guilty of.

Concern over ‘fake news’ and ‘post-truth politics’ from the West’s endless war propagandists?
It’s hard to think of a better example of what psychologists call ‘projection.’

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