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Tottenham: police shooting followed by riots
#41
Two fundamental points about social media during these UK riots:

i) it provides police with an evidential trail which will be used to attempt to bring prosecutions;

ii) certain social media channels crashed to unavailable in key locations at key times during the riots.

Draw your own conclusions about politicians calling for more access to, control over, and even blackouts, of social media.

My clear conclusion is that politicians from across the spectrum will eagerly seek to gain ever more intrusive powers into our individual lives when an opportunity presents itself.

Draconian new powers would represent the legalisation of actions which are often currently illegal for governments or police to perform.
"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."

Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon

"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
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#42
The Independent Police Complaints Commission?

Quote:Mark Duggan death: IPCC says it inadvertently misled media

Police watchdog says it led media to believe shots were exchanged but Duggan was carrying gun that was never used


Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk, Friday 12 August 2011 17.47 BST

The police watchdog investigating the death of Mark Duggan, whose shooting by police sparked the first bout of rioting in London on Saturday, has said it may have "inadvertently" misled journalists into believing the Tottenham man had fired at police.

Responding to inquiries from the Guardian, the Independent Police Complaints Commission said in a statement: "it seems possible that we may have verbally led journalists to believe that shots were exchanged".

Duggan, 29, was shot dead after the Toyota Estima minicab he was a passenger in was stopped by Metropolitan poloce officers at around 6.15pm, in Ferry Lane, on Thursday 4 August.

Duggan was carrying a loaded gun but it was not used. Investigators have established that two shots were fired by one CO19 firearms officer.

A postmortem examination concluded that Duggan was killed by a single gunshot wound to the chest. He also received a second gunshot wound to his right arm.

A police officer was also injured after a bullet presumably from a ricochet lodged in his police radio.

The alleged failure by the IPCC to provide Duggan's family and the local community with reliable information in the aftermath of his death was part of the reason local people took to the streets to protest last week.

The peaceful demonstration outside Tottenham police station later descended into rioting and looting that, within days, had inspired "copycat" disorder across England.

Duggan's family consistently said that if he was carrying a loaded weapon, they did not believe he would have fired at police.

The firearms officer who shot Duggan has said that he never claimed he was fired at and is understood to be upset that the family might have been misled into believing this.

It was scepticism surrounding the official account of his death reinforced by BlackBerry messages drawing attention to the inconsistencies in the account given by the authorities that led people to protest two days later.

The IPCC's first statement about Duggan's death, issued four hours after he was pronounced dead, made no reference to shots fired at police.

However, at least one spokesperson from the watchdog appears to have misinformed journalists, leading to reports the following that day that Duggan was killed by police after "firing first".

The Evening Standard said Duggan had been involved in a "shootout", adding that "spokesman for the [IPCC] said it appeared the officer was shot first before police returned fire".

The Mirror quoted an IPCC spokesman saying: "We do not know the order the shots were fired. We understand the officer was shot first, then the male."

An article in the Independent made a similar claim. It reported: "It is understood that the officer was shot first, but this is not known for certain, an IPCC spokesperson said."

The IPCC statement has said: "Analysis of media coverage and queries raised on Twitter have alerted to us to the possibility that we may have inadvertently given misleading information to journalists when responding to very early media queries following the shooting of Mark Duggan by MPS officers on the evening of 4 August."

Conceding it was possible it had issued information suggesting shots were exchanged, the IPCC added: "This was consistent with early information we received that an officer had been shot and taken to hospital.

"Any reference to an exchange of shots was not correct and did not feature in any of our formal statements, although an officer was taken to hospital after the incident."
"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."

Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon

"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
Reply
#43
Weekend Edition
August 12 - 14, 2011

CounterPunch Diary

Riots and the Underclass

By ALEXANDER COCKBURN

What's a riot without looting? We want it, they've got it! You'd think from the press that looting was alien to British tradition, imported by immigrants more recent than the Normans. Not so. Gavin Mortimer, author of The Blitz, had an amusing piece in the First Post about the conduct of Britons at the time of their Finest Hour:

"It didn't take long for a hardcore of opportunists to realise there were rich pickings available in the immediate aftermath of a raid and the looting wasn't limited to civilians.

"In October 1940 Winston Churchill ordered the arrest and conviction of six London firemen caught looting from a burned-out shop to be hushed up by Herbert Morrison, his Home Secretary. The Prime Minister feared that if the story was made public it would further dishearten Londoners struggling to cope with the daily bombardments…

"The looting was often carried out by gangs of children organized by a Fagin figure; he would send them into bombed-out houses the morning after a raid with orders to target coins from gas meters and display cases containing First World War medals. In April 1941 Lambeth juvenile court dealt with 42 children in one day, from teenage girls caught stripping clothes from dead bodies to a seven-year-old boy who had stolen five shillings from the gas meter of a damaged house. In total, juvenile crime accounted for 48 per cent of all arrests in the nine months between September 1940 and May 1941 and there were 4,584 cases of looting.

"Joan Veazey, whose husband was a vicar in Kennington, south London, wrote in her diary after one raid in 1940: "The most sickening thing was to see people like vultures, picking up things and taking them away. I didn't like to feel that English people would do this, but they did."

"Perhaps the most shameful episode of the whole Blitz occurred on the evening of March 8 1941 when the Cafe de Paris in Piccadilly was hit by a German bomb. The cafe was one of the most glamorous night spots in London, the venue for off-duty officers to bring their wives and girlfriends, and within minutes of its destruction the looters moved in.

"Some of the looters in the Cafe de Paris cut off the people's fingers to get the rings," recalled Ballard Berkeley, a policeman during the Blitz who later found fame as the 'Major' in Fawlty Towers. Even the wounded in the Cafe de Paris were robbed of their jewellery amid the confusion and carnage."

A revolution is not a tea party, sniffed Lenin, but he should have added that it often starts off with a big party. Perhaps he was acknowledging that when he said a revolution was "a festival of the oppressed." After the storming of the Winter Palace in October 1917 everyone was drunk for three days, conduct of which the prissy Vladimir Illich no doubt heartily disapproved.

The riots in London last week started in Tottenham in an area with the highest unemployment in London, in response to the police shooting a young black man, in a country where black people are 26 times more likely to stopped and searched by the cops than whites. Stop-and-searches are allowed under Section 60 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994, introduced to deal with football hooligans. It allows police to search anyone in a designated area without specific grounds for suspicion. Use of Section 60 has risen more than 300 per cent between 2005 and last year. In 1997/98 there were 7,970 stop-and-searches, increasing to 53,250 in 2007/08 and 149,955 in 2008/09. Between 2005/06 and 2008/09 the number of Section 60 searches of black people rose by more than 650 per cent.

The day after the heaviest night of rioting I saw Darcus Howe, originally from Trinidad and former editor of Race and Class, now a broadcaster and columnist, being questioned by a snotty BBC interviewer, Fiona Armstrong. We ran it last week as website of the day. Howe linked the riots to upsurges by the oppressed across the Middle East and then remarked that when he'd recently asked his son how many times he'd been stopped and searched by the police, his boy answered that it had happened too often for him to count. To which point Ms Armstrong, plainly irked by the trend in the conversation in which Howe was conspicuously failing in his assigned task namely to denounce the rioters said nastily, ""You are not a stranger to riots yourself I understand, are you? You have taken part in them yourself?"

"I have never taken part in a single riot. I've been on demonstrations that ended up in a conflict," the 67-year old Howe answered indignantly. "Have some respect for an old West Indian negro and stop accusing me of being a rioter because you wanted for me to get abusive. You just sound idiotic have some respect." The BBC later apologized to those offended by what it agreed was "a poorly phrased question."

Back in 1981, I interviewed Howe in his Race and Class office after the Brixton and Toxteth riots. Overweening police power and state racism were fuelling unofficial racism, with innumerable murderous attacks on blacks in a Britain ravaged by Margaret Thatcher's economic policies. At the start of April, 1981, the police launched Operation Swamp 81 to combat street crime. More than 1,000 people were stopped and questioned in the first four days. The uprising in Brixton began on April 9 and lasted through April 11. There were 4,000 police in the area and 286 people arrested. By the weekend of July 10-12 riots were taking place in 30 towns and cities black and white youths together and in some case white youths alone. They were scenes, as Lord Scarman said of Brixton, "of violence and disorder… the like of which had not previously been seen in this century in Britain.

"The riots opened up an entirely new political ethos," Howe said to me back then. "To understand the organizational stages that we are moving to, it is essential to know that in the late 1960s there were black-power organizations in almost every city in this country. A combination of repression not as sharp as in the United States but repression British style and Harold Wilson's political cynicism undermined that movement. What he did was offer a lot of money to the black community, which set up all kinds of advice centers and projects for this and projects for that. So, in some black communities, if you have a headache somebody is onto you saying, Well, look, I have a project with blacks with headaches.' That paralysed the political initiative of blacks. It was done for you by the state and, as you know, Britain is saturated with the concept of welfare.The riots have broken through that completely, smashed it to smithereens, indicating that it has no palliative, no cure for the cancer."

AC: "You're looking toward a black/white mass organization?"

"Black/white mass movement. But one must always point to what we are heading for. What are we aiming for? Are we aiming for the vulgarity of a better standard of living. I think a passion has arisen in the breasts of millions of people in the world for a kind of democratic form and shape which would equal parliamentary democracy in its creativity and innovation."

AC: "Let's look at a likely future for Britain: enormous structural unemployment, the creation of a permanent underclass.."

"Permanent unemployed, that is what is on the agenda, with the revolutionizing of production, with the microchip. Now what the British working class has to do is break out of this demand for jobs, which characterized the 1930s, the Jarrow marches, and so on. They will have to lift themselves to the new reality, which will of course call for the merciless shortening of the working day, the working week, and the working life, and a concentration on leisure and the quality of work… They say, March for jobs.' What jobs?"

AC: It's stimulating to hear you say this, because the left seems to have a lot of illusions about this. The slogan should really be, Less work,' not More work.'

"'Less work, more money.' And that's a vulgarity too. Less work, more leisure.' We have built up over the centuries the technological capacity to release people from that kind of servitude."

AC: So then you have to talk about redistribution of wealth.

"Free distribution. A completely new ethos. And we are on the verge of it. "

AC: Don't you think that pathological symptoms, including racism, will increase as people fight on the scrap heap, as the economy goes down?"

"I agree. Something else increases too. Side by side, living in the same atom as pathology, is the possibility to lift. You can't reach the lifting stage without the pathological stage. Crabs in a barrel. Or you leap. The leap depends on what dominant political ideology is presented to the population."

AC: You view the current decline of the Labour Party with considerable optimism?"

"Considerable optimism."

It was six in the evening and outside the Race Today offices people were sloshing through the puddles on the way home from work, or standing about in doorways. Howe got up and stretched, then picked up a document.
"Listen to this," he said. "After the uprising in Moss Side last July they appointed a local Manchester barrister called Hytner to enquire into what happened. Here's what he writes:

"At about 10.20 pm a responsible and in our view reliable mature black citizen was in Moss Side East and observed a large number of black youths whom he recognized as having come from a club a mile away. At the same time a horde of white youths came up the road from the direction of Moss Side. He spoke to them and ascertained they were from Wythenshawe. The two groups met and joined. There was nothing in the manner of their meeting which in any way reflected a prearranged plan. There was a sudden shout and the mob stormed off in the direction of Moss Side police station. We are given an account by another witness who saw the mob approach the station, led, so it was claimed, by a nine-year-old boy with those with Liverpool accents in the van.'"

Howe smiled. "Whites from Wytheshawe, blacks from Moss Side, no prearranged plan. They gather. There was a shout. On to Moss side police station.' That gives you some indication. You must have a convergence of interests in order for that to happen."

That was a interchange at the start of the Eighties. Here we are thirty years later, structural unemployment etched ever more deeply into the economy of Britain, now in a melding of Thatcherism and New Labor's follow-on from Thatcherism, abysmal poverty and hopelessness in Tottenham and similar districts coexisting at close quarters with profligacy and corruption saturating the higher social tiers and the political sector in one of the most unequal, class-divided cities in Europe.

As the Daily Mash puts it: "Many of these kids are less then two miles away from people who get multi-million pound bonuses for catastrophic failure and live in a culture where the material excess of people who are famous for nothing is rammed relentlessly into their faces by middle-brow tabloid newspapers. And of course later today the looters will be condemned in Parliament by a bunch of people who stole money by accident."

Bands of youths make for stores in Central London in part to exact revenge on places that contemptuously rejected their applications for a job. One group methodically worked its way through a tony restaurant in Notting Hill Gate, relieving the clientele of their wallets.

I've no idea what levels of political organization there are in the ghettoes, nor the possibility of unity, amid the stories of murderous racial clashes between blacks and Asians, with Turks and Sikhs arrayed in defense of their modest stores and temples.

On the state agenda of every advanced industrial nation, in the ebb from the great post World War 2 economic boom, is the simple question: amid vast structural unemployment and diminished social expectations how best to assuage the alarm expressed by James Anderton in 1980, when he was Chief Constable of Greater Manchester. Anderton gave it as his considered opinion that "from the police point of view … theft, burglary, even violent crime will not be the predominant police feature. What will be the matter of greatest concern will be the covert and ultimately overt attempts to overthrow democracy, to subvert the authority of the state."

Britain had its Notting Hill Gate riots in 1958, and Justice Salmon sent nine white Teddy Boys to long terms in prison, saying, "We must establish the rights of everyone, irrespective of the color of their skin … to walk through our streets with their heads erect and free from fear."

Twenty years later, in 1978 Judge McKinnon ruled that Kingsley Read, head of the fascist National Party, was not guilty of incitement to racial hatred when he said publicly of 18-year-old Gurdip Singh Chaggar, set upon by white youths and stabbed to death, "One down, one million to go."

In the interval British governments, both Conservative and Labour, falteringly, with occasional remissions and bouts of bad conscience, proceeded down the path to racism. Pace David Cameron's recent pronouncement of its death, between the late 1940s and the late 1960s the chance of establishing a multiracial society was squandered.

In the 1960s, America saw fearsome ghetto riots from Newark, to Detroit, to the city of Watts in Los Angeles The state's response was a threefold strategy: first, buy your way out. Money sluiced into "urban renewal schemes" basically aimed as various forms of ethnic cleansing and wholesale destruction of black neighborhoods. Gentrification and deindustrialization assisted in this process. Across the next twenty years, for example, the manufacturing base of Los Angeles simply disappeared.

Since these shifts involved the creation of new ghettoes, the second strategy was ever more stringent policing, with federal money pouring into city law enforcement across the country, the creation of heavily armed SWAT teams, even in tiny communities. The third strategy was the conversion of a political threat political activism by the Black Panthers and other national organizations (many of whose leaders were straightforwardly murdered by the police) into a crime problem, a.k.a the "war on drugs," launched in 1969 by Richard Nixon who emphasized to his chief aide, H.R. Haldeman, that the whole problem [drugs] was really the blacks. The key is to devise a system that recognizes this while not appearing to."

There is plenty of evidence that the strategists of the state's response to black political insurgency were far from unhappy to see poor neighborhoods demobilized by drugs, black-on-black violence, as gangs fought bloody turf wars for street corner concessions.

Across the next 35 years the U.S. prison population rose relentlessly, the cells disproportionately filled with blacks and Hispanics. The "system" had devised a useful differential in sentencing that saw blacks and other poor people serving vastly longer terms for possession of crack, rather than powder cocaine a middle-class preference.

The last major race riot in America was in 1992, following the release of a video of a black man, Rodney King, being savagely beaten by Los Angeles cops. By the 1990s, the "buy-out" strategy had evolved into vast programs of prison construction, paralleling the rise of gated residential communities replete with walls and armed guards keeping the bad guts out.

America this year has been waking up to two increasingly self-evident truths: violent crime rates for murder, robbery, aggravated assault and rape have been falling, and are now at their lowest level for nearly 40 years. Fears that the 2008 crash and indisputably harsh economic times for poor people would produce a new crime wave have proved to be baseless. In 2010, New York saw 536 murders 65 more than in 2009, which was the lowest since 1963.

All crime rates in Los Angeles have been dropping for two decades. Homicides plunged 18 percent last year. Violent crime is roughly the same in LA as in Portland, Oregon, the whitest major city in America, the same as it was in the lily-white LA of the early 1960s.The 1960s, when crime rates rose, had roughly the same unemployment rate as the late 1990s and early 2000s, when crime fell.

Twenty years ago, conservative criminologists here were drawing up graphic scenarios of cities held hostage by gangs of feral black youth. City police forces compiled vast computer data banks of "gangs," and suspects linked to a gang drew heavier sentences, shoved into a penal system where remedial counseling, post release job training had vanished.

Did crime fall because all the bad guys were locked up? No one claims this beyond 25 percent of the reduction itself a very high estimate. Another theory is that by the mid 1990s the crack wars were over, and the victors enjoying their hard-won monopolies under the overall supervision of the police. Other theories were recently explored by professor James Q. Wilson, an influential conservative sociologist:

"There may also be a medical reason for the decline in crime. For decades, doctors have known that children with lots of lead in their blood are much more likely to be aggressive, violent and delinquent. In 1974, the Environmental Protection Agency required oil companies to stop putting lead in gasoline. At the same time, lead in paint was banned for any new home (though old buildings still have lead paint, which children can absorb). Tests have shown that the amount of lead in Americans' blood fell by four-fifths between 1975 and 1991. A 2007 study by the economist Jessica Wolpaw Reyes contended that the reduction in gasoline lead produced more than half of the decline in violent crime during the 1990s in the U.S. and might bring about greater declines in the future."

Cocaine use has been declining. Wilson cites a study of13,000 people arrested in Manhattan between 1987 and 1997, a disproportionate number of whom were black: "Those born between 1948 and 1969 were heavily involved with crack cocaine, but those born after 1969 used very little crack and instead smoked marijuana. The reason was simple: the younger African Americans had known many people who used crack and other hard drugs and wound up in prisons, hospitals and morgues. The risks of using marijuana were far less serious. This shift in drug use, if the New York City experience is borne out in other locations, can help to explain the fall in black inner-city crime rates after the early 1990s."

Simultaneous to the drop in violent crime rates has come the discovery that America can't afford to lock up 2.3 million people for years on end. It's too expensive. When he's not praying to a Christian God to save America, Gov. Perry of Texas is trying to save the state's budget in part by getting convicts out of prisons and into various diversion programs.

So, by after a nearly 40-year detour into a gulag Republic, with 25 percent of the world's prisoners, America is retrenching toward softer solutions. The War on Drugs and the War and Crime carry a heavy price tag. A generation's worth of "wars on crime" and of glor*ification of the men and women in blue have engendered a culture of law enforcement that is all too often vicious*ly violent, contemptuous of the law, morally corrupt, and confident of the credulity of the courts. In Chicago, police ignored witnesses, dis*counted testimony, as they bustled the innocent onto Death Row. In New York, a plain-clothes posse of heav*ily armed cops roamed the streets, justifiably confident that their lethal onslaught would receive official protec*tion, which it did until an unprecedented popular uproar brought the perpetrators to book.

These aren't isolated cases. There isn't a state in the union where cops aren't perjuring themselves, using excessive force, targeting minorities.

Those endless wars on crime and drugs a staple of 90 percent of America's politicians these last thirty years have engendered not merely 2.3 million prisoners but a vindictive hysteria that pulses on the threshold of homi*cide in the bosoms of many of our uniformed law enforcers. Time and again, one hears stories attesting to the fact that they are ready, at a moment's notice or a slender pretext, to blow someone away, beat him to a pulp, throw him in the slammer, sew him up with police perjuries and snitch-driven charges, and try to toss him in a dungeon for a quarter-century or more.

The price for decades of this mythmaking and cop boosterism? It was summed up in the absurdity of the declaration of the U.S. Supreme Court, in 2000, that flight from a police officer constitutes sound reason for arrest. Actually, it constitutes plain common sense.

Emergency laws, rushed through by panicked politicians, are always bad. It will take America many decades, if ever, to restore civil liberties, approach crime rationally and this will only come with courageous and inventive political leadership in the poor communities. Britons should study carefully the lessons of Americans' 40-year swerve.

Back in 1981 Howe put the right questions on the agenda. We've got further away from answering them, and in fact the left rarely asks them at all, bobbing along in the neoliberal backwash that began in the early 1970s.

http://www.counterpunch.org/
"Where is the intersection between the world's deep hunger and your deep gladness?"
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#44
FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 2011

The Meaning of the British Riots

[Image: LondonBridgeFreda.jpg]


Painting by Anthony Freda: http://www.AnthonyFreda.com

Corruption At The Top Leads To Lawlessness By The People
I've repeatedly noted that corruption and lawlessness by our "leaders" encourages lawlessness by everyone else. See this, for example.

Peter Oborne - the Daily Telegraph's chief political commentator - wrote yesterday:

The criminality in our streets cannot be dissociated from the moral disintegration in the highest ranks of modern British society. The last two decades have seen a terrifying decline in standards among the British governing elite. It has become acceptable for our politicians to lie and to cheat. An almost universal culture of selfishness and greed has grown up.

It is not just the feral youth of Tottenham who have forgotten they have duties as well as rights. So have the feral rich ....

***
The so-called feral youth seem oblivious to decency and morality. But so are the venal rich and powerful too many of our bankers, footballers, wealthy businessmen and politicians.

***

The sad young men and women, without hope or aspiration ... have caused such mayhem and chaos over the past few days. But the rioters have this defence: they are just following the example set by senior and respected figures in society. Let's bear in mind that many of the youths in our inner cities have never been trained in decent values. All they have ever known is barbarism. Our politicians and bankers, in sharp contrast, tend to have been to good schools and universities and to have been given every opportunity in life.

Something has gone horribly wrong in Britain. If we are ever to confront the problems which have been exposed in the past week, it is essential to bear in mind that they do not only exist in inner-city housing estates.

The culture of greed and impunity we are witnessing on our TV screens stretches right up into corporate boardrooms and the Cabinet. It embraces the police and large parts of our media. It is not just its damaged youth, but Britain itself that needs a moral reformation.

Osborne also gives specific examples of corruption, such as the prime minister's involvement in the Murdoch scandal, and members of parliament abusing expense accounts.

Indeed, the rioters themselves agreed. As Reuters notes:
Speaking to Reuters late on Tuesday, looters and other local people in east London pointed to the wealth gap as the underlying cause, also blaming what they saw as police prejudice and a host of recent scandals.

Spending cuts were now hitting the poorest hardest, they said, and after tales of politicians claiming excessive expenses, alleged police corruption and bankers getting rich it was their turn to take what they wanted.

"They set the example," said one youth after riots in the London district of Hackney. "It's time to loot."

(Indeed, looting by the bankers has been shown by a Nobel prize winning economist as being the root cause of the S&L crisis and today's economic crisis).

Austerity Leads To Rioting And Unrest
I've previously argued that the British riots are due to bad economic policy which has created rampant inequality. (As I've noted for years, raging inequality and policies which help the big boys at the expense of the "little people" are causing unrest - not just in Egypt - but worldwide.)

As the above-quoted Reuters article notes:

"I don't think the implications of this have been fully thought through or accepted yet," said Pepe Egger, western Europe analyst for London-based consultancy Exclusive Analysis.

"What we have here is the result of decades of growing divisions and marginalization, but austerity will almost certainly make it worse. Yes, the police can restore control with massive force but that is not sustainable either in the long term. You have to accept that this may happen again."

***

Analyst Louise Taggart at security consultancy AKE said that in time urban unrest worries could make it harder to cut other programs as well, including sorely needed education and community services. It went well beyond Britain, she said.
"Across Europe, we've already seen some incidence of civil unrest," she said, saying it would almost inevitably impact policy. "There's definitely a likelihood that similar scenes might erupt when austerity cuts really start to be felt."

Indeed, a study this month by economists Hans-Joachim Voth and Jacopo Ponticelli shows that - from 1919 to the present - austerity leads to violence and instability:
Does fiscal consolidation lead to social unrest? From the end of the Weimar Republic in Germany in the 1930s to anti-government demonstrations in Greece in 2010-11, austerity has tended to go hand in hand with politically motivated violence and social instability. In this paper, we assemble cross-country evidence for the period 1919 to the present, and examine the extent to which societies become unstable after budget cuts. The results show a clear positive correlation between fiscal retrenchment and instability. We test if the relationship simply reflects economic downturns, and conclude that this is not the key factor. We also analyse interactions with various economic and political variables. While autocracies and democracies show a broadly similar responses to budget cuts, countries with more constraints on the executive are less likely to see unrest as a result of austerity measures.

As CNN notes:

Studying instances of austerity and unrest in Europe between 1919 to 2009, Ponticelli and Voth conclude that there is a "clear link between the magnitude of expenditure cutbacks and increases in social unrest. With every additional percentage point of GDP in spending cuts, the risk of unrest increases."

"Expenditure cuts carry a significant risk of increasing the frequency of riots, anti-government demonstrations, general strikes, political assassinations, and attempts at revolutionary overthrow of the established order. While these are low probability events in normal years, they become much more common as austerity measures are implemented."

Corruption And Austerity = Global Unrest

Time Magazine's Global Spin blog sums up these two threads nicely:

Simply working hard and playing by the rules is no longer a path to prosperity or even a dignified future in much of the industrialized West, where neoliberal economic policies have funneled most of the wealth created in recent decades to a small, already wealthy elite, while shrinking the middle class finds its living standard steadily declining, and more than one in five young people is unemployed with no prospect of finding work in the foreseeable future.

The looters respond to their circumstances by simply breaking the rules and grabbing whatever they can, while the moment -- and their capacity to hurt anyone who gets in their way -- allows it. The protestors, who are far more numerous, despond by demanding that the rules be changed, and they're on the streets because they believe that even the democratic political system has failed them, producing governments in thrall to the interests of financial elites regardless of which party dominates. And the British anti-austerity programs are echoed on the streets of Madrid and Barcelona, Rome and Lisbon, Athens and Tel Aviv -- an Austerity Intifada is sweeping Europe.

The term "looting" commonly describes the actions of those who help themselves to the merchandize of stricken stores when social order breaks down. But many of those in the more orderly protests on the streets of Europe accuse the Western world's bankers of doing the same to the state, demanding bailouts to save them from the consequences of their catastrophic mistakes, leaving them sitting pretty while public debt balloons and the middle class and poor are expected to shoulder the burden of austerity.

Whether they respond with disciplined protest or nihilism and criminality, millions of young people in Europe today see playing by the rules of the socio-economic and political status quo as offering them no decent future. Politicians may comfort themselves with the notion that the social unrest on the streets is simply a problem of a "culture of irresponsibility" and deviance, but if mainstream society is unable to integrate whole swathes of its youth population and give them a stake in playing by the rules, it's going to face growing discontent.

***

The protests that have shaken Spain, Greece, Portugal, France, Israel and Britain this year (even before this week's rioting) suggest that the pattern continues. The orgy of looting and vandalism that Britain suffered this week may have been simply the ugly Halloween face of a far broader wave of social unrest that expresses not simply economic discontent, but the declining legitimacy of the political system in the minds of millions of people who see it as serving the interests of a narrow elite at the expense of the majority.

More vigorous policing will drive the thugs off the streets and restore a tenuous calm. But keeping them off the streets, and integrating them -- and the hundreds of thousands who have poured onto the streets in peaceful protests -- into a socio-economic system that offers them a future and a stake in social stability is a challenge that may be nearing crisis proportions.

http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2011/08/m...riots.html
"Where is the intersection between the world's deep hunger and your deep gladness?"
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#45
Very interesting historical viewpoint! The BBC had its own [they do occasionally still rise to an occasion, if rarely!] interesting expert analyst today who spoke to had prior been studying the exact population that most was involved in the street insurrections and redistribution of property. She spoke about the very low levels of literacy, education, hope, chances in life to get out of the lowest classes, as well as prejudices against them, etc. The matter of a highly classed society has long come back to haunt 'jolly' England. Pirate As others have pointed out the upper classes also have their oft approved or overlooked ways of redistribution of wealth - but the state comes down hard on those who are not supposed to 'have' to 'get'. Sadly, ever was thus. The greater the disparity of wealth in a society, the greater the discord, discontent, and from time to time riot. Read The growing disparity of class and wealth in the USA and other countries will soon have them following suit, methinks. :flypig:
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
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#46
The post above says in part

AC: It's stimulating to hear you say this, because the left seems to have a lot of illusions about this. The slogan should really be, Less work,' not More work.'

"'Less work, more money.' And that's a vulgarity too. Less work, more leisure.' We have built up over the centuries the technological capacity to release people from that kind of servitude."

AC: So then you have to talk about redistribution of wealth.

"Free distribution. A completely new ethos. And we are on the verge of it. "

I find this an interesting view here that reflects the Marxist theory that automation will lead to communism because the productive capacity of society leads to a surplus of goods & services and eliminates work.
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#47


This morning I woke up in a curfew;
O God, I was a prisoner, too - yeah!
Could not recognize the faces standing over me;
They were all dressed in uniforms of brutality. Eh!

How many rivers do we have to cross,
Before we can talk to the boss? Eh!
All that we got, it seems we have lost;
We must have really paid the cost.

(That's why we gonna be)
Burnin' and a-lootin' tonight;
(Say we gonna burn and loot)
Burnin' and a-lootin' tonight;
(One more thing)
Burnin' all pollution tonight;
(Oh, yeah, yeah)
Burnin' all illusion tonight.

Oh, stop them!

Give me the food and let me grow;
Let the Roots Man take a blow.
All them drugs gonna make you slow now;
It's not the music of the ghetto. Eh!

Weepin' and a-wailin' tonight;
(Ooh, can't stop the tears!)
Weepin' and a-wailin' tonight;
(We've been suffering these long, long-a years)
Weepin' and a-wailin' tonight
(Will you say cheer?)
Weepin' and a-wailin' tonight
( ... )

Give me the food and let me grow;
Let the roots man take a blow.
All them drugs gonna make you slow;
It's not the music of the ghetto.

We gonna be burnin' and a-lootin' tonight;
(To survive, yeah!)
Burnin' and a-lootin' tonight;
(Save your babies' lives)
Burning all pollution tonight;
(Pollution ... )
Burning all illusion tonight
(Lord-a, Lord-a, Lord-a, Lord!)

Burning and a-looting tonight;
Burning and a-looting tonight;
Burning all pollution tonight.
"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
Buckminster Fuller
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#48
There's a public spat taking place in Blighty featuring PM Cameron and his senior ministers (such as Osborne and May) versus the UK's top cops, Orde (ACPO), Fahy (GMP) and Godwin (acting Met chief).

The entire government was lounging in expensive villas or waterskiing in exclusive locations, surrounded by taxpayer-funded security, when the riots broke out. On their early return from hols, desperate to "regain the initiative", the politicians claimed they'd cancelled all police leave and ordered 16,000 police (up from 6,000) onto the streets of London.

Despite Orde, Fahy and Godwin all wanting the job of Chief of the Metropolitan Police (vacant due to the Murdoch corruption scandal), these top coppers have reacted angrily to the politicians' claims, stating that the government has no power to order the cancellation of police leave and all operational policing decisions have been made by the police, not by politicians.

Quote:Sir Hugh Orde, President of the Association of Chief Police Officers said: The fact that politicians chose to come back is an irrelevance in terms of the tactics that were by then developing.

The more robust policing tactics you saw were not a function of political interference; they were a function of the numbers being available to allow the chief constables to change their tactics.'

The reality is that the cancellation of police leave is an emergency measure, and across the country tens of thousands of police officers have been moved from their standard 8-hour shifts to 12-hour shifts. This is clearly unsustainable in the medium or long term.

Cameron has reacted by appointing "US supercop Bill Bratton" as a special advisor to the government.

Quote:Police forces should be more assertive in their dealings with offenders so criminals would "fear them" and lose confidence in their ability to commit crimes, he (Bratton) said in an interview with the Telegraph.

Bratton advocates a doctrine of "escalating force" against criminals calling for rubber bullets, Tasers, pepper spray and water cannon as potential weapons.

Over the past two decades Bratton has gained a reputation for introducing bold measures to reduce crime, particularly in Los Angeles where he is credited with ushering in an era of safer streets and improved relations between police and communities.

I note in the fine print a fact that MSM has reported in passing but failed to draw any attention to:

Quote:Bratton.... is chairman of private security firm Kroll

The fact that Kroll is now directly advising the British government on the policing of the UK's streets fills me with dread.

Quote:On September 11, 2009, (Bratton) was awarded with the honorary title of Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II.[1] In early August 2009, Bratton unexpectedly announced that effective October 31, 2009, he would resign his position as Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department to take a position as Chairman of Altegrity Risk International in New York City. On September 16, 2010, Bratton became the chairman of Kroll, an Altegrity company

And what kind of services do ARI and Bill Bratton CBE offer?

Quote:Altegrity Risk International (ARI) is a New York City based global risk consulting and information services company. A subsidiary of Altegrity, Inc. of Falls Church, VA, ARI provides investigations, business intelligence, forensic accounting, compliance & monitoring and security services to businesses and government agencies around the world.

The spat between the top cops and the British government is window dressing.

The appointment of Bratton and what he represents is the significant deep political event.
"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."

Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon

"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
Reply
#49
Jan Klimkowski Wrote:US supercop Bill Bratton" as a special advisor to the government.

Quote:I note in the fine print a fact that MSM has reported in passing but failed to draw any attention to:

Quote:Bratton.... is chairman of private security firm Kroll

The fact that Kroll is now directly advising the British government on the policing of the UK's streets fills me with dread.
:panic: :banghead:
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#50
Commander Bratton (so honored by the Queen one September the 11th) joins former U.S. Homeland Security Chief Michael Chertoff, former CIA Director George Tenet, former FBI Director Louis Freeh, NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly, and New York Senator Charles Schumer as recipients of the William and Naomi Gorowitz Institute Service Award, which salutes outstanding achievements in combating terrorism, extremism and injustice, and for making "a dramatic difference [in making Boston, NY and LA] safer and more secure for all, and his crime-fighting initiatives have been hailed and emulated by police departments throughout the world." This article asks the question of whether he changed the corrupt culture of the LAPD, which was "copiously fictionalized in numerous movies, novels and television shows throughout its history"), and has been involved in numerous civil rights violations and race-based cases among other controversies. The review of his book, "The Turnaround" notes that "his mother caught him directing traffic in the street" when he was merely 18 months old.

I'd say Greater London is in for a ride.
"Where is the intersection between the world's deep hunger and your deep gladness?"
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