Baftas: poor man’s Oscars…..

February 8, 2009

slumdog-millionaire-20081024032712754_640w1

Not many surprises, if any, at this year’s Baftas. It was the night for Slumdog Millionaire sweeping the board. Kate Winslet won Best Actress for The Reader. Danny Boyle won Best Director for Slumdog Millionaire along with Best Film. Kinda poignant that Heath Ledger was posthumously awarded Best Supporting Actor for his role as the Joker in Batman. Mickey Rourke won Best Actor for The Wrestler.

Oh, and Penélope Cruz won Best Supporting Actress for that bunk-up ménage à trois, Vicky Cristina Barcelona (not seen as yet) but thankfully… Javier Bardem has a better hair cut…..

I was hoping that Milk would win something as it was an outstanding contender for an award but didn’t so that was a disappointment.

So the Oscars await….. And without a doubt Slumdog Millionaire will sweep the board


Black Tambourine – Beck

February 8, 2009

I was watching Michael Gondry’s Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind last night, the off-the-wall surreal screenplay written by the excellent Charlie Kaufman. I love the film for reasons unknown to me especially as I am not a big fan of either Kate Winslet (though I have to say I thought Heavenly Creatures was a great film) or Jim Carrey but they are impressive in this film. 

It’s original and clever as it’s about rediscovering lost relationships. And the central question, can memories be totally erased?

I liked the re-working of the Korgis Everyone’s Gotta Learn Sometimes by Beck but still prefer Black Tambourine along with it’s dead arty video….


John Pilger: the politics of bollocks…

February 8, 2009

Before is an article from John Pilger’s website. Very good it is too.

Growing up in an Antipodean society proud of its rich variety of expletives, I never heard the word bollocks. It was only on arrival in England that I understood its majesterial power. All classes used it. Judges grunted it; an editor of the Daily Mirror used it as noun, adjective and verb. Certainly, the resonance of a double vowel saw off its closest American contender. It had authority.

A high official with the Gilbertian title of Lord West of Spithead used it to great effect on 27 January. The former admiral, who is security adviser to Gordon Brown, was referring to Tony Blair’s famous assertion that invading countries and killing innocent people did not increase the threat of terrorism at home.

“That was clearly bollocks,” said his lordship, who warned of the perceived “linkage between the US, Israel and the UK” in the horrors inflicted on Gaza and the effect on the recruitment of terrorists in Britain. In other words, he was stating the obvious: that state terrorism begets individual or group terrorism at source. Just as Blair was the prime mover of the London bombings of 7 July 2005, so Brown, having pursued the same cynical crusades in Muslim countries and having armed and disported himself before the criminal regime in Tel Aviv, will share responsibility for related atrocities at home.

There is a lot of bollocks about at the moment.

The BBC’s explanation for banning an appeal on behalf of the stricken people of Gaza is a vivid example. Mark Thompson, the director general, cited the BBC’s legal requirement to be “impartial… because Gaza is a major ongoing news story in which humanitarian issues… are both at the heart of the story and contentious.”

In a letter to Thompson, David Bracewell, illuminated the deceit behind this. He pointed to previous BBC appeals for the Disasters Emergency Committee that were not only made in the midst of “an ongoing news story” in which humanitarian issues were “contentious”, but demonstrated how the BBC took sides. In 1999, at the height of the illegal Nato bombing of Serbia and Kosovo, the TV presenter Jill Dando made an appeal on behalf of Kosovar refugees. The BBC web page for that appeal was linked to numerous articles meant to support the gravity of the humanitarian issue. These included quotations from Blair himself, such as “This will be a daily pounding until [Slobodan Milosevic] comes into line with the terms that Nato has laid down.” There was no significant balance of view from the Yugoslav side, and not a single mention that the flight of Kosovar refugees began only after Nato had started bombing. Similarly, in an appeal for the victims of the civil war in the Congo, the BBC favoured the regime of Joseph Kabila without referring to the Amnesty, Human Rights Watch and other reports accusing his forces of atrocities. In contrast, the rebel leader Nkunda was “accused of committing atrocities” and was ordained the BBC’s bad guy. Kabila, who represented western interests, was clearly the good guy – just like Nato in the Balkans and Israel in the Middle East.

While Mark Thompson and his satraps richly deserve the Lord West of Spithead Bollocks Blue Ribbon, that honour goes to the cheer squad of  President Barack Obama, whose cult-like obeisance goes on and on.

On 23 January, the Guardian’s front page declared, “Obama shuts network of CIA ‘ghost prisons’ ”. The “wholesale deconstruction [sic] of George Bush’s war on terror”, said the report, had been ordered by the new president who would be “shutting down the CIA’s secret prison network, banning torture and rendition…”.

The bollocks quotient on this was so high that it read like the press release it was, citing “officials briefing reporters at the White House yesterday”.  Obama’s orders, according to a group of 16 retired generals and admirals who attended a presidential signing ceremony, “would restore America’s moral standing in the world”. What moral standing? It never ceases to astonish that experienced reporters can transmit PR stunts like this, bearing in mind the moving belt of lies from the same source under only nominally different management.

Far from “deconstructing [sic] the war on terror”, Obama is clearly pursuing it with the same vigour, ideological backing and deception as the previous administration. George W. Bush’s first war, in Afghanistan, and last war, in Pakistan, are now Obama’s wars – with thousands more US troops to be deployed, more bombing and more slaughter of civilians.  On 22 January, the day he described Afghanistan and Pakistan as “the central front in our enduring struggle against terrorism and extremism”, 22 Afghan civilians died beneath Obama’s bombs in a hamlet populated mainly by shepherds and which, by all accounts, had not laid eyes on the Taliban. Women and children were among the dead, which is normal. 

Far from “shutting down the CIA’s secret prison network”, Obama’s  executive orders actually give the CIA authority to carry out renditions, abductions and transfers of prisoners in secret without the threat of legal obstruction. As the Los Angeles Times disclosed, “current and former intelligence officials said the rendition program might be poised to play an expanded role.” A semantic sleight of hand is that “long term prisons” are changed to “short term prisons”; and while Americans are now banned from directly torturing people, foreigners working for the US are not. This means that America’s numerous “covert actions” will operate as they did under previous presidents, with proxy regimes, such as Augusto Pinochet’s in Chile, doing the dirtiest work.

Bush’s open support for torture, and Donald Rumsfeld’s extraordinary personal overseeing of certain torture techniques, upset many in America’s “secret army” of subversive military and intelligence operators as it exposed how the system worked.  Obama’s nominee for director of national intelligence, Admiral Dennis Blair, has said the Army Field Manual may include new forms of “harsh interrogation”, which will be kept secret.

Obama has chosen not to stop any of this. Neither do his ballyhooed executive orders put an end to Bush’s assault on constitutional and international law. He has retained Bush’s “right” to imprison anyone, without trial or charges. No “ghost prisoners” are being released or are due to be tried before a civilian court. His nominee for attorney-general, Eric Holder, has endorsed an extension of Bush’s totalitarian USA Patriot Act, which allows federal agents to demand Americans’ library and bookshop records. The man of “change”, is changing little. That ought to be front page news from Washington.

The Lord West of Spithead Bollocks Prize (Runner-up) is shared. On 28 January, a national Greenpeace advertisement opposing a third runway at London’s Heathrow airport summed up the almost willful naivety that has obstructed informed analysis of the Obama administration. “Fortunately,” declared Greenpeace beneath a God-like picture of Obama, “the White House has a new occupant, and he has asked us all to roll back the spectre of a warming planet.” This was followed by Obama’s rhetorical flourish about “putting off unpleasant decisions”. In fact, Obama has made no commitment to curtail the America’s infamous responsibility for the causes of global warming. As with Bush and most modern era presidents, it is oil, not stemming carbon emissions, that informs the new administration. Obama’s national security adviser, General Jim Jones, a former Nato supreme commander, made his name planning US military control over the exploitation of oil and gas reserves from the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea to the Gulf of Guinea in Africa.

Sharing the Bollocks Runner-up Prize is the Observer, which on 25 January published a major news report headlined, “How Obama set the tone for a new US revolution”. This was reminiscent of the Observer almost a dozen years ago when liberalism’s other great white hope, Tony Blair, came to power. “Goodbye Xenophobia” was the Observer’s post-election front page in 1997 and “The Foreign Office says Hello World, remember us”.  The government, said the breathless text, would push for “new worldwide rules on human rights and the environment” and implement “tough new limits” on arms sales. The opposite happened. Last year, Britain was the biggest arms dealer in the world; currently it is second only to the United States.

In the Blair mould, the Obama White House “sprang into action” with its “radical plans”. The new president’s first phone call was to that Palestinian quisling, the unelected and deeply unpopular Mohammed Abbas. There was a “hot pace” and a “new era”, in which a notorious name from an ancien regime, Richard Holbrooke, was dispatched to Pakistan. In 1978, Holbrooke betrayed a promise to normalise relations with the Vietnamese on the eve of a vicious embargo that ruined the lives of countless Vietnamese children. Under Obama, the “sense of a new era abroad”, declared the Observer, “was reinforced by the confirmation of Hillary Clinton as secretary of state”. Clinton has threatened to “entirely obliterate Iran” on behalf of Israel.

What the childish fawning over Obama obscures is the dark power assembled under cover of America’s first “post-racial president”. Apart from the US, the world’s most dangerous state is demonstrably Israel, having recently killed and maimed some 4,000 people in Gaza with impunity. On 10 February, a bellicose Israeli electorate is likely to put Binyamin Netanyahu into power. Netanyahu is a fanatic’s fanatic who has made clear his intention of attacking Iran. In the Wall Street Journal on 24 January, he described Iran as the “terrorist mother base” and justified the murder of civilians in Gaza because “Israel cannot accept an Iranian terror base (Gaza) next to its major cities”. On 31 January, unaware he was being filmed, Israel’s ambassador in Australia described the massacres in Gaza as a “pre-introduction” - dress rehearsal - for an attack on Iran.

For Netanyahu, the reassuring news is that Obama’s administration is the most Zionist in living memory – a truth that has struggled to be told from beneath the soggy layers of Obama-love. Not a single member of Obama’s team demurred from Obama’s support for Israel’s barbaric actions in Gaza. Obama himself likened the safety of his two young daughters with that of Israeli children while making not a single reference to the thousands of Palestinian children killed with American weapons - a violation of both international and US law. He did, however, demand that the people of Gaza be denied “smuggled” small arms with which to defend themselves against the world’s fourth largest military power. And he paid tribute to the Arab dictatorships, such as Egypt, which are bribed by the US Treasury to help the US and  Israel enforce policies described by the United Nations Rapporteur, Richard Falk, a Jew, as “genocidal”.

It is time the Obama lovers grew up. It is time those paid to keep the record straight gave us the opportunity to debate informatively. In the 21st century, people power remains a huge and exciting and largely untapped force for change, but it is nothing without truth. “In the time of universal deceit,” wrote George Orwell, “telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” 


More on welfare reform and the private sector….

February 8, 2009

swr

I wrote about this earlier in the week NL halting the bidding for contracts regarding the flexible new deal.

News that Labour’s radical plan is in turmoil and facing possible legal challenges comes as unemployment is about to pass the two million mark for the first time in more than a decade. Analysts believe it will hit three million before the end of this year.

Responding to warnings that his reforms will not work without major changes, James Purnell, the work and pensions secretary, has abandoned plans to announce the preferred bidders for the multi-million-pound contracts this week. This follows demands from the firms involved for hundreds of millions more in “up-front” cash. A crisis meeting between top department officials and the bidding companies was cancelled on Friday after Whitehall announced a “short pause” in the tendering process.

And these greedy private companies aren’t happy and are demanding more up front cash from the government. It didn’t dawn on these companies when they first put their bid in that the economy was in the process of nose diving? Some of them are now threatening legal action.  The original idea for contracting out was that the private companies carried the risk and this was factored in the cost.

But in reality this is a nonsense as private companies go back to the government asking for more money as opposed to taking the risk. So more public money will be chucked at the greedy private sector. Where’s the advantage in that?

It’s dishonest to discount the private sector bid on the basis that it will be carrying the risk because it won’t, it will be the taxpayer!

As Mark Serwotka says: Nobody can have any confidence in the claim that the flexible new deal can start in October. Any attempts to rescue these flawed plans will result in taxpayers handing a blank cheque to the preferred bidders


Life – Emily Dickinson

February 8, 2009

emilydickinson

Much madness is divinest sense

To a discerning eye;

Much sense the starkest madness.

‘T is the majority

In this, as all, prevails.

Assent, and you are sane;

Demur – you’re straightway dangerous

And handled with a chain.

 

From Life by Emily Dickinson


Harpy goes to a bookshop

February 7, 2009

 

I usually while away the hours browsing abe.com finding books. Oh the joys of ordering in cyberspace and then like magic your purchases appear all boxed up rather like Xmas dropped through the letterbox. But for once I decided to visit a bookshop in the real world.

I was committed to buying some fiction and not ending up in the crime fiction section…where, lazily, I purchase the latest en vogue crime fiction writer though I still have a great deal of respect for Ian Rankin. So perusing the fiction I swept passed Hunter.S. Thompson, Kurt Vonnegut, Paul Auster…. and so on. Decisions, decisions…. including, ‘I am sure I’ve read that’… Memory becomes a bit fragmented over time.

Becoming overwhelmed with the fiction section, I wandered in a state of somnambulism to the non-fiction section. Or to be more apt…the politics, political science, philosophy, gender studies and anything with an ‘ology at the end sections (the art and design sections can wait another day).

I ended up buying books by Frantz Fanon and Edward Said as the copies I owned before have ‘disappeared’ somewhere in the spacetime rift in my flat. My flat resembles the Bermuda Triangle….books go ‘missing’ in the void. Though, to be honest, it’s more to do with my appalling untidiness…and should stop using alien forces as an excuse. It is becoming expensive replacing the books I have ‘lost’, and then discovering the duplicates of the same book (such as having 3 copies of Ernest Mandel’s Late Capitalism…..!!!!).

Anyway, I digress, I ended up back in the fiction section and my eye caught the name, ‘Angela Carter’. She was and still is, along with Margaret Atwood, my favourite woman author. Her books are magical combined with female transgression, that are imaginative and lyrical. I adored her rewritings of fairy tales (The Bloody Chamber).

Her re-workings of male texts such as de Sade and Charles Baudelaire. The Sadeian Woman had quite a political impact on me as it shifted my ideas on pornography when I originally read it in the late 1980s. Even though I own every book Angela Carter has ever written (though don’t ask where they are on book shelves….somewhere in the rift) I just had to buy The Passion of New Eve. Got a kinda delightful thrill of reading her magical prose again later on sitting in a cafe.

My bookshop excursion was a success though I gotta improve the fiction buying…and tidy my books.


Campaign against the Welfare Reform Bill

February 7, 2009

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The Welfare Reform Bill is going through Parliament at unbelievable speed. It was introduced in mid January and expected to become an Act sometime in March. At the moment the Bill is with the Public Bill Committee, which is expected to be finished with the Bill on or before the 3rd March 2009.

The TUC in conjunction with the PCS union are organising a lobby of Parliament on the 3rd March from 12:30-2:30pm (I will post further  once details are confirmed). Please come along if you want to voice your opposition against this draconian and pernicious Bill which attacks the core values of the welfare state and the true meaning of social security.

Part one of the Bill is, Work for your benefits’ schemes etc. This means, simply, Workfare. NL may, euphemistically, refer to ‘work for your benefits schemes’ when in reality this nothing more than  forced labour.

People will be expected to work for their benefits and failure to comply with the regulations means sanctions i.e. loss of benefits. At the moment, the current level for JSA (Jobseekers’ Allowance) is £60.50 per week.

If claimants are expected to do a 35 hour week then that works out at £1.73 an hour!! This will inevitably drive down pay and conditions therefore the trade unions should be at the forefront fighting this.

Clause 13 refers to external provider of social funds. This means contracting out the social fund when it should stay in the public sector. And then at Clause 23, further privatisation with contracting out the administration of welfare benefits.

Clause 24 revolves around sanctions where failure to comply with the regulations will mean loss of benefits for one week. So that will mean increased poverty.

Other clauses include abolishing income support. Conditionality and sanctions are at the heart of this Bill which means that NL are continuing to punish, penalise and criminalise the poor.

Workfare will mean forced labour and even the DWP’s own research is sceptical about the positives of ‘work for your benefits’ schemes. Privatisation means no transparency, responsibility and accountablity. And recently, due to the ecomomic crisis, private companies not being able to cope with administrating welfare benefits. Private companies underestimated the time and effort it takes to advise and support claimants. That is why the obvious solution is to keep public services public!

Unfortunately, as NL are intent are pushing through this Bill at breakneck speed we need to act promptly. The liberal intelligentsia along with the media have accepted these arguments from NL coupled with the reactionary ‘culture of dependency’ myths.

Thatcher in 1985 tried to impose Workfare, she couldn’t as the cabinet rebelled. Probably in the knowledge that there would be a campaign to stop it. Twenty-four years on a Labour government (yes, I’ll repeat that, a Labour government) is imposing Workfare with the illusion that it is all about ‘choice’. These are the actions of a neo-liberal government committed to social authoritarianism whose interests are firmly in corporate capitalism.

The politics of the workhouse are upon us….

If you want to show your opposition please come to the Lobby on the 3rd March. Write to your MP as you still have time. Get your MP to support these 3 EDMs.

TUC Campaign to increase Jobseekers’ Allowance

Contracting out Welfare Provision

Contracting out the Social Fund


Policing and Crime Bill: who will it ‘protect’?

February 6, 2009

ECP

I have written about the Policing and Crime Bill in relation to prostitution. The Bill got its second reading on the 19th January and now has gone to the Public Bill Committee.

The English Collective of Prostitutes have produced a very good briefing about this Bill. Clauses 13, 15, 16, 18, 20 and 25 will drive prostitution underground. And there’s an misguided notion that this Bill will ‘protect’ sex workers. No it won’t it will criminalise people who already exist on the margins of society. This Bill has a strong stench of Victorian morality emanating from it.

Clause 13: ‘Paying for sexual services of a prostitute controlled for gain’. This is such a loose definition, especially ‘controlled for gain’ as that can apply to the whole of the labour market and commodification under capitalism. But in this context, the meaning of controlled is stretched as it includes anyone who works with a sex worker i.e. maid, receptionist, partner.

And in December of 2008, the cops have been raidng premises in Soho. Receptionists have been threatened with ‘controlling prostitution for gain’. The ECP correctly argue, who is this benefiting? It is far safer for sex workers to work indoors as opposed to on the street.

Clause 15: ‘Soliciting is persistent ‘if it takes place twice over a period of three months’

If NL were serious about supporting sex workers getting out of prostitution then how is further criminalising them helpful? Criminal records have a tendency to hinder people getting employment. So they are already stymied at the first hurdle. And again, using prisons as punishment that are already used as social dustbins will make sex workers more vulnerable and marginalised. Prison does not work!!

You can read about the other Clauses on the ECP briefing. They also state:

The proposals claim to offer protection and safety, and “support those involved in prostitution to develop routes out”. They do not. As the economic recession hits, more women, especially mothers, are likely to resort to prostitution to support their families. If prostitution is forced underground women will be exposed to greater dangers and be less able to come forward to get help.

The other good thing about the ECP is that sex workers are given a voice to talk about their own experiences. Surely it is imperative that sex workers are central of decision making as opposed to being ignored, deemed invisible and vilified, for that is what NL is doing. Dismissing the voices of sex workers with their continuous binge of authoritarian legislation. And this is a question to feminists who support further legislation in criminalising prostitution, does this in anyway support women sex workers, does this legislation advance the struggle for women’s autonomy? No, it doesn’t. Sex work is a reality.

Along with living under a patriarchal capitalist society which is dominated by unequal power relationships, there’s an economic demand for selling sex, and sex, like any other commodity, can be sold and where the transaction will have a material advancement for the seller.

The only viable alternative is, and as I stressed before, is unionisation and decriminalisation.


Hierarchy of oppression?

February 5, 2009
I remember having a conversation some years ago with this activist, someone I had immense respect for especially as they had written extensively on anti-Irish racism. But what shocked me is that he made a racist comment which I took him to task over. His reply stunned me somewhat.
 
“Why are you so concerned about the comment, you’re not black”!
 
Now, all the respect I had, politically, for this guy kind of fizzled away as I found that comment rather dense and surprising for someone so committed in fighting anti-Irish racism.  I argued that just because I am a white woman doesn’t mean I am only concerned about my own oppression as a woman.  It is about challenging and confronting all oppression, it’s about solidarity with the oppressed and, indeed, someone with his politics I assumed would have understood that. I also said that if someone made an anti-Irish racist comment he would criticise it, rightly in my opinion, but not if it was any other racist comment. 
 
Surprisingly he just didn’t get it and someone with a heightened political consciousness as well. He just seemed committed to fighting his own oppression while totally ignoring the whole picture. 
 
Why am I remembering this? What sparked it off was reading a blog post on the F Word. There was a discussion about Carol Thatcher’s racist remark. My own attitude was it was right for her to get the sack for making it. She knew damn well it was racist. The commentary on the F Word ended up discussing sexism and racism. There was a point made about racism trumping sexism in regards to the misogyny of Jeremy Clarkson. Frankly, he too should get the boot…..
There were some very good comments combatting that belief. It doesn’t help in the least when you start to argue that one form of oppression outweighs another.  Oppression is oppression, it can take different forms, whether overt or subtle, and the intersection between other forms of oppression.
I have also heard similar arguments on the Left that at the apex of oppression is class. Class trumps all forms of oppression. No, it doesn’t. Politically, we have to reject this idea of a hierarchy of oppression as it presents a situation that can only be described as divisive. 
My own political belief is that you use a class analysis to explain oppression, but that class isn’t a ‘superior’ form of oppression that garners any more solidarity than confronting and fighting other forms of oppression. If you feel that sexism isn’t being taken seriously then you must challenge that along with trying to make the invisible visible but not at the expense of downplaying another form of oppression.
 
 

Social evils of the 21st century….

February 4, 2009

Joseph Rowntree Foundation has started a discussion to find out what are the social evils of the 21th century. You can have a look at the website to see what they have come up with so far…

So these are my own themes on the matter. Social evils..? In the words of Sarah Palin, you betcha!

1. Capitalism

2. Oppression

3. Inequality

4. Neoliberalism

5. Globalisation

6. Privatisation

7. Marketisation

8. Alienation

9. Atomisation

10. Exploitation

11. War

12. Imperialism

13. Colonialism

14. New Labour

15. ‘Law and Order’

16. Authoritarianism

17. Ruling class

18. Free market economics

19. James Purnell

20. Gordon Brown

Ok, the last two are people  (I have trouble describing them as human cos of all the misery they have created…) but you get my drift…


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