Showing posts with label Telegraph. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Telegraph. Show all posts

Friday, 9 December 2016

Relevance of Immigration in the UK Referendum


by Les May
YESTERDAY the Home Affairs Select Committee chaired by Yvette Cooper launched an inquiry into developing a consensus on an effective immigration policy. 

She said, ‘Immigration is one of the most important issues facing our country and will be central to the Brexit deal. Britain voted for change, especially on free movement, but there has been very little debate about what kind of reforms or immigration control that should now mean or how we get the best deal for the country.’   

Which isn’t strictly true.  In the recent referendum the only question that was asked was whether or not we wanted to leave or stay in the European Union.  There was no question about immigration, the single market, or about the wider question of free movement of people, good, capital and services, so no politician has the right to infer anything from the vote other than that a majority of people voted to leave the EU. This isn’t sophistry, it’s just a fact.   

Fixating on immigration ignores all the other reasons why people may have chosen to vote ‘leave’. Is immigration a significant factor in the growth of inequality? Is it really the reason why some people are paying out a third of their disposable income to rent a house for which they have little security of tenure?  Is it really the reason why some people have become reliant on food banks to ward off starvation?  Is it really the reason that some people feel they have been ‘left behind’ by globalization?  
No! It’s not that ‘they’ have come here to steal our jobs, its that our companies have exported jobs to ‘them’ to line the pockets of CEOs.

In the 1980s the ‘Chicago school’ of economists argued that companies should be run for the benefit of the ‘owners’.  The natural consequence of this was that the proportion of money going to wage earners fell and that to shareholders increased.


One way of boosting profits still further is to export manufacturing jobs to low wage economies in the Far East.  Check out where your Dyson vacuum was made.   


Whether you think that Cooper belongs to it or not there is a strand in the Labour party the best way to fight off a challenge from UKIP for the so called ‘Labour vote’ is to emulate UKIP and start parroting ‘something must be done about immigration’. The effect of this will be to let the Tories off the hook as architects of our present era of ‘casino capitalism’ where a few winners take all and the rest of us squabble about what is left. 

I’m told that Corbyn has never said anything to indicate that he has any time for ‘populism’.  The indications are that he, and Diane Abbot, will tackle UKIP’s populist policies head on.  But that could bring them into conflict with those in the Labour party who think the best way forward is to become a kind of ‘UKIP Lite’. 

In summer the writers of ‘think pieces’ were speculating that the Right and Left wings would end up fighting over the carcase of the Labour party.  But if the recent referendum told us anything it’s that people do not always feel bound by those traditional allegiances.  How long before those same writers are predicting the death of the Labour party as its splits into those who are willing to scapegoat immigrants to garner votes and those who are not?

Wednesday, 19 October 2016

Trade Unionist Disciplined: Alec McFadden case


Below is a campaign statement that has been sent to Northern Voices
by the Campaign to defend Alec McFadden.  Though we have made some
investigations about this problem, Northern Voices does not have enough
information to justify us taking sides at this stage.  In the light of this it has
been decided to publish the statement below in full without comment, which
was sent to us by Liz Epps on behalf of the campaign to defend Alec McFadden.
ALEC McFadden, a stalwart of the trade union movement for over 50 years, has been the victim of a miscarriage of justice which is having terrible repercussions. He needs your support. Alec is known and respected throughout the country for his work as a union organiser, and for his role since 1996 in running the Salford Unemployed and Community Resource Centre which has provided help and assistance to thousands of people. He is a committed campaigner against sexism, racism, fascism and opposition to benefits sanctions. He suffered a serious facial wound when a fascist attacked him with a knife at his home on the Wirral.

Alec organised a very successful Anti- Austerity March in October 2015. At the end of the protest, on 3rd October 2015, the marchers had a meal at Smith’s restaurant in Eccles, Salford where Alec was the compere for the evening with a number of speakers including Rebecca Long Bailey MP for Salford, Steve North Unison branch secretary and the then Mayor of Salford Ian Stewart. Also present were other local councillors and the press.  Five weeks later Alec was informed by Unite (13 November) that it ‘had received a formal complaint from one of our members about your actions during the March against Austerity from Thursday 1st October to Sunday 4th October.’ It was alleged he had breached Unite’s Dignity and Harassment Policy. No further details were divulged. Two weeks later Alec had received a further letter from Unite (25 November) which told him no more than the identity of the complainant and that she had made a complaint which ‘relates to alleged incidents which took place between 1st and 4th October 2015 towards another Unite member’.

Investigation

Unknown to Alec, witness statements were made by the complainant and two supportive witnesses.  On 6 January 2016he complainant and one witness were interviewed by a Unite Investigation panel on 6 January 2016, again without the knowledge of Alec. So Alec had no opportunity to challenge them, nor was the panel able to put any response from Alec to the witnesses, since the panel had not disclosed the witness statements or even the nature of the allegation to Alec.  It had certainly not asked him for his side of the story.

Alec was then called to attend before the Investigation Panel on 22nd January.  By then all Alec knew was what was in the two letters he had received. He had no idea what was alleged against him.  The Investigation Panel chose not to share with him the statements it had obtained from the complainant and her witness or the notes made of their interviews by the panel. So Alec had no idea of the case against him and no chance to prepare a defence.   When the interview with Alec commenced he was still in complete ignorance of the date, time, place and nature of the alleged ‘incidents’.  It was not until half way through the interview that he was shocked to be told that he was alleged to have slapped the complainant on the bottom at the dinner in the middle of the restaurant.  He was not told that the complainant’s witness had added ‘the lights were quite bright and we were very visible to our fellow marchers and other guests’.  Alec denied the allegation.  The panel asked no further questions about it.  Neither the complainant nor her witnesses were present when Alec was interviewed, and since he had not been provided with their witness statements or notes of the interview, he had no opportunity to point out inconsistencies or contradictions in their evidence.  Nevertheless, the investigation panel found that there was a case for him to answer.

Disciplinary

Next Alec was called to a formal Unite disciplinary hearing on 15th April 2016. Before hearing Alec’s defence or his witnesses, he was startled to be told by the Chair of the Disciplinary Panel: ‘From what has been presented to us, in all probability, some misconduct has taken place.’ This conclusion was based on solely on their reading of the report of the Investigation Panel.

The Disciplinary Panel refused a request that the complainant and her witnesses should attend and give evidence to the Panel because it would be ‘inappropriate.’ So Alec and his representative were denied the chance to question them, put his case to them or explore the serious inconsistencies in their account of the alleged incident. Likewise, the Panel denied itself the opportunity to hear the complainant and her witness in person so as to weigh up the credibility of their account. Even Alec’s offer that the complainant be questioned without Alec being present was refused.

Perhaps, not surprisingly, the Disciplinary Panel reached the same conclusion at the end of the hearing that it had before the case began: ‘that in all probability, Mr McFadden did commit the offence of slapping [the complainant] on the bottom.’ The conclusion was expressed to be based solely on the evidence of the Complainant’s witness, since it said that to disbelieve her statement ‘would be tantamount to an accusation of lying.’ How the Panel could determine whether she was lying or not without hearing and seeing her give her evidence and being questioned about it was not explained. Nor was it explained on what basis the Panel were able to disregard the evidence of Alec and his witnesses (that they had neither seen anything untoward nor heard anyone speak of such a thing during the course of a long evening during which both Alec and the Complainant were present, at one stage sitting next to each other.) The Disciplinary Panel decided that Alec must be banned from office in Unite and attend Unite’s Dignity and Respect Training Course.

Appeal

Alec appealed to an Appeal Panel of Unite’s EC. Again Alec’s rep asked that the complainant and her witness attend, give their evidence orally and be subject to questions from him and the Panel. He emphasised that inconsistent and contradictory evidence of the Complainant and her witnesses should be subject to at least some questioning and scrutiny as no such questioning or scrutiny had occurred at the Investigation or Disciplinary stages. This request was dismissed out of hand and the Panel refused to hear for themselves the evidence against Alec or allow it to be questioned.

Alec provided the panel with even more witness statements of those present in the restaurant including the MP and even the Restaurant manager and staff, all of whom clearly stated they saw or heard nothing of the alleged incident which according to the complainant took place in view of everyone.

Particularly significant was that Alec’s rep also sought to introduce the evidence of a Mr S who had, in August 2016, been told by the complainant that she had not been assaulted by Alec and that she had been pressurised into making the complaint.  The Appeal Panel refused to entertain this evidence on the ground that ‘it was an unsubstantiated account of an alleged conversation with the complainant that had been compellingly and comprehensively rebutted by her.’   This appears to be false.  There was no evidence that Mr S’s account had ever been put to the complainant - let alone that she rebutted it.  As noted, Alec’s request for her attendance had been refused. It was not suggested that she had made a further, undisclosed statement rebutting Mr S – such a statement would surely have been produced had it been made.

The Appeal Panel’s refusal to entertain this crucial exonerating piece of defence evidence can only have been because it fundamentally undermined the prosecution case. That is a travesty of justice.

In the light of that it was no surprise that the Appeal panel upheld the decision of the Disciplinary Panel. When his rep asked how long Alec would be suspended from Office he was told it was for at least 5 years! That is until Alec is 75.

Breach of Confidentiality + Media Smears

If that were not bad enough, what followed will shock and concern every trade union activist. Confidential details of the case, including a statement by the complainant were leaked to the media. This could have only come from someone within Unite.  The angle the media took was to attack Alec and link him to Jeremy Corbyn so as to undermine him.  Alec had been one of Corbyn’s biggest supporters and articles in the Telegraph, Times, Liverpool Echo and Guardian were spun to try to damage Corbyn and denigrate Alec.

The TUC

In September 2016, the TUC informed Alec that in addition to the sanctions imposed by Unite, the TUC also banned him from holding his elected position representative to and as chair of the TUCJCC. That is not an ‘office’; it is certainly not an office in Unite and besides Alec’s position on the TUCJCC is also because he is a member of Unison.  More significantly still, the TUC has no power to prevent Trades Union Councils nominating who they wish to represent them on the TUCJCC, the TUC has no disciplinary powers over members of affiliated unions and had held no hearing to allow Alec to present a case before imposing such a penalty.  But the penalty imposed by the TUC went yet further than that imposed by Unite: Alec was barred from unofficial pre-meetings of the TUCJCC and from attending any TUC event, including those open to the public!

Questions have even been raised about Alec’s employment.

Facebook Lies

Now new evidence has emerged from the Facebook postings of the complainant.  She has changed her mind again and decided to revert to claiming that the incident did take place and she has broadcast details of the allegation along with grossly offensive comments about Alec.  Even more disturbingly, having linked to an article about an (unrelated) Employment Tribunal case against UNITE for sexual harassment she made the following comment in relation to her own case:

‘In my experience the equalities officer was invisible, the questioning that I was subject to would not be out of place among rape apologists, the concern for the person making the complaint was non–existent’.

This is a quite remarkable claim since one of the most unjust features of this drawn out disciplinary process is that the complainant was never questioned about her allegation - let alone in the manner she describes.  She was never present to face any questions put to her by Alec, his rep or the Disciplinary or Appeal Panels which took the decisions.  Before the Investigatory Panel the notes show that she was never asked even to describe the alleged incident; her prepared statement was simply accepted as fact. The sole questions about the alleged incident were: ‘…you had to ask him to move is this when the incident happened? And if so what kind of a slap was it?’  To which the answer was ‘Yes.  It was a hard slap; I was shocked and carried on walking…’  The allegation that the Unite Investigation Panel were behaving like ‘rape apologists’ is both a very serious allegation and one that is totally refuted by the notes.

This Facebook posting casts further serious doubt on the credibility of the complainant.

Unfortunately there is no further appeal under Unite rules and Alec appears to have no alternative but to take his case to the Certification Officer, given the appalling consequences that he is facing.

Every trade unionist should fight to root sexual harassment out of our movement and ensure our events are safe places for all members. But there is also no place in our movement for those who make false accusations against individuals and the union, then broadcast false and wholly misleading details of the matter on social media. More than that, no-one should be convicted without a fair trial.

Defend Alec

Alec has a long and proud record of promoting and encouraging women to get active in the union movement, he has never been subject to these kind of accusations in over 50 years of service in the movement.  Natural justice is a requirement of Unite’s disciplinary rules (rule 27.2) but Alec has been denied it.  Here, that denial was in refusing Alec the right to question those who made allegations against him and in refusing to hear a witness who had vital evidence for his defence.  The witness statements of many respected people present at the restaurant where the alleged incident took place have been simply ignored or discounted.  He has had confidential details of an internal union matters leaked to the press where it was spun to attack Jeremy Corbyn.  He has now discovered that his accuser has put on social media claims which are clearly both untrue and bring the union into disrepute.

He has been removed and suspended from office for over 5 years and the TUC has tried to remove him from elected positions that are completely unconnected to his membership of Unite.

Questions for Unite

We call on the Executive Committee of UNITE and the General Secretary to review this case as a matter of urgency.  As trade unionists we fight on a daily basis against injustice; we cannot allow this to happen to Alec.  Please support our call for a review of this decision and an investigation into the scandalous claims made by the complainant and the manner in which confidential information was leaked to the Tory media to be used to attack both Alec and Jeremy Corbyn.

Email: defend.alec.mcfadden@hotmail.com   10th October 2016

Printed and Published by defend Alec McFadden campaign

Monday, 12 October 2015

The Overactive Imagination of Simon Danczuk

by Les May
IF you want to know what 'The Establishment' really is and how it works, look no further than what has happened since allegations of sexual abuse of a twelve year old boy were made against the late Sir Edward Heath at the beginning of August.

On 3 August the Daily Mirror was running the story with the headline 'Sir Edward Heath child abuse claims: Alleged victim was raped by ex PM when he was just 12', complete with the obligatory photographs of Heath with Cyril Smith and Heath with Jimmy Savile.
Simon Danczuk was quoted as saying:
'These are very serious allegations and they need to be investigated as a matter of urgency.'

In another Mirror article, he is quoted as saying:
'There have been rumours and allegations out there for some time, and I don’t say that lightly.'
Now this is a bit of a porky because in his book he is happy to make statements about child abuse by Cyril Smith being part of a paedophile ring in the absence of evidence of any kind.  Two days after the book was published in April 2014, he told the Today program:
'Had he been prosecuted, then the house of cards would have fallen, in terms of that paedophile network, and it could have brought the government down.'
Again no evidence is produced.

In July of last year, he said with reference to Geoffrey Dickens:
'I have no doubt whatsoever that Dickens was on the right trail and he caused a lot of problems for the establishment. In the early 1980s he famously gave a dossier to the then Conservative Home Secretary, Leon Brittan, giving names of paedophiles operating at the top of the British establishment. Jimmy Savile and Cyril Smith were said to be named in the 40-page dossier.'
As Danczuk never saw the so called 'dossier' he cannot know what it contained or how many pages it had, and all this is just another figment of his over active imagination, with a bit of hearsay thrown in. (Incidentally on 5 July 2014 the Mirror said it was 50 pages!)

By 5th, August, The Telegraph was running a story which cast doubt on some aspects of the story and The Guardian's Simon Jenkins was writing:
'The case against Edward Heath looks flimsy, but already the gutter is being dredged for lurid, unsubstantiated claims'.  He also wrote that the past weeks assault on Heath's reputation 'has been driven by political antipathy to Heath, by latent homophobia and by a general suspicion of people who seem to lead abnormal lives.'

In late August, Harvey Proctor 'outed' himself as a suspect and made a detailed statement about the nature of the accusations which had been made against him. This may have had some influence in shifting perceptions as what had seemed 'lurid' allegations began to look like 'ludicrous' allegations.

Five weeks after the initial claims about Heath the Daily Mail, which had been eager to serialise Danczuk's book about Cyril Smith, was writing; 'Nick: Victim or fantasist?  Rape.  Torture.  Murders'.  These were the extraordinary claims made by one man against leading Establishment figures.  Police called his story 'credible and true' but there's not a shred of evidence to back his allegations'

Then last Tuesday, a BBC Panorama programme cast serious doubt on the claims of a paedophile ring using the facilities of the Elm Street guest house, which seems to have been operated as a homosexual brothel, and on the accusations against the late Sir Leon Brittan and others.

In recent days we have had demands for an apology from Tom Watson with regard to statements he made about Brittan.  As these demands have been prominently reported in the Daily Mail there is no doubt a bit of added spice in being able to attack the Deputy Leader of the Labour party.

So in just nine weeks our print and broadcast media have at last woken up to the fact that it might be a good idea to adopt a slightly more sceptical approach to reporting allegations of child abuse.  Or
at least they have when the accusations are levelled at Establishment figures.

When Danczuk was interviewed by LBC on 10 October the accusations against Establishment figures were described as 'ludicrous', but the claims in his book about Smith being a paedophile were taken for granted as being true by the interviewers, though I doubt that either of them have actually gone to the trouble of reading it. Remember also that on 3rd, August Danczuk was quoted as saying:
'These are very serious allegations and they need to be investigated as a matter of urgency'.

I'm not a conspiracy theorist so I don't think this reflects an attempt at an Establishment 'cover up' to protect people in high places because I too think they are 'ludicrous'.  But if we are going to be asked to re-evaluate the allegations against Heath, Brittan and sundry others of the 'great and the good', should we not also re-evaluate the allegations of paedophilia against Cyril Smith and especially the claims in the Danczuk book?

Whilst no one can possibly defend what Tom Watson repeated about Leon Brittan after his death nor his attempt to pressure the Director of Public Prosecution, at least he has had the good grace to apologise for what he did say and to make an effort to explain some of his actions saying, 'I had been told of multiple allegations about Leon Brittan and I had met some of the people making those allegations at their request. I did not and could not know if they were true but I did believe their claims should be fully investigated'.

In contrast to Danczuk, Watson recognises in that last sentence that just because he was told something, he should not just assume it was true. Yet Watson is being vilified by Richard Littlejohn who calls him the 'Nonce Finder General' in the Daily Mail, whilst Danczuk, who never misses the opportunity to repeat his claims about Cyril Smith as if they had been proven to be true, seems to be immune from criticism. Perhaps the reason is that the Daily Mail paid him to serialise the book. Or is it that they consider him their 'tame' Labour MP always ready to criticise his party?

As a BBC report from November 2012 makes clear Danczuk's original intervention was with regard to 'indecent assault' by Smith who had carried out fake medical examinations and spankings of young men (not 'young boys' as Danczuk claimed) at Cambridge House hostel in the 1960s.

Although Danczuk has been happy to be seen as the person who unearthed this sordid story, in fact it was revealed in the Rochdale Alternative Paper (RAP) in May 1979 by the co-editors David Bartlett and John Walker.  Whilst these two could support their story with affidavits from six of the men indecently assaulted by Smith, Danczuk can offer nothing but assertions, and second and third hand gossip about Smith's activities after the closure of Cambridge House in the 1960s.  At least one of his claims involving a car boot load of child pornography, and Northamptonshire police looking the other way has been shown to be without foundation.

Is it not strange that the BBC can so quickly research and produce a Panorama programme casting doubt on the truth of some of the claims made against some very prominent figures, yet the organisation has been happy to offer Danczuk an option on his book about Cyril Smith being turned into a television programme?

Is it not doubly strange that even though we now know that Danczuk's former aide Matthew Baker has been accused of attempting to smear a former Labour Leader of Rochdale council with having knowledge in the 1990s of abuse in a Rochdale School, no-one has thought to question the veracity of some of the claims about abuse by Cyril Smith made in the book he co-authored with Danczuk?

What Simon Jenkins had to say about Heath can equally well be applied to Smith. Danczuk has repeatedly used Smith's actions at Cambridge House and his claims based on gossip and hearsay
against Rochdale LibDems and Nick Clegg, Smith was a homosexual, and his size and devotion to his mother no doubt made his life seem 'abnormal' to some people.


http://www.rochdaleonline.co.uk/news-features/2/news-headlines/88102/letter-from-parliament-simon-danczuk-mp
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/sir-edward-heath-child-abuse-6188388
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/sir-edward-heath-child-abuse-6188663

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/11786520/Sir-Edward-Heath-Sex-trial-was-not-dropped-to-cover-up-ex-PM-allegations-says-lawyer.html
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/05/convict-dead-defenceless-case-edward-heath
https://theneedleblog.wordpress.com/2015/08/25/full-statement-of-harvey-proctor/
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3240661/Nick-Victim-fantasist-Rape-Torture-Murders-extraordinary-claims-one-man-against-leading-Establishment-figures-Police-called-story-credible-true-s-not-shred-evidence-allegations.html
http://www.lbc.co.uk/danczuk-we-ruled-out-action-on-abuse-allegations--117706
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-34484611
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/10/09/i-had-a-duty-to-pass-leon-brittain-allegations-to-authorities-says-tom-watson_n_8268722.html

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3265531/Lord-Brittan-treated-outrageously-police-gossiped-journalists-unfounded-rape-claims-against-brother-says.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-3265772/DAILY-MAIL-COMMENT-not-say-sorry-Mr-Watson.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-3265730/Why-Nonce-Finder-General-Tom-Watson-won-t-say-sorry-unfit-high-political-office-bearded-Trot-Corbyn-RICHARD-LITTLEJOHN.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-20303606
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-northamptonshire-33716982
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-34400387
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-27047442

Friday, 28 August 2015

Harvey Proctor & Extra Judicial Tactics

NORTHERN Voices, ever since 2012, has been in the forefront of exposing issues surrounding Cyril Smith and child sex exploitation.  However, we are concerned about the recent practices of some politicians and certain media outlets with regard to their use of parliamentary privilege and the use of trial by media to potentially influence the process and administration of justice.
 
On Wednesday in the Daily Telegraph, Mathew Scott wrote:
'In a year's time Harvey Proctor's news conference will be seen either as a chilling display of hypocrisy or as the moment a brave man finally took on the combined might of a misguided Metropolitan Police and a small, nasty and highly influential section of the press and internet.'

Harvey Procter, is a former Conservative MP who was very publicly implicated in 1987, in what was then regarded as a 'gay sex' scandal, when he stood down from his parliamentary seat.   He left the House of Commons – after pleading guilty and being fined for gross indecency charges.  At present the campaign against certain so-called 'VIP paedophiles' , including Sir Edward Heath, Leon Brittain, and others, has been promoted by the online news organisation Exaro News.  Exaro's editor in chief is Mark Watts, a highly experienced journalist who, before setting up Exaro, had contributed stories to the Daily Telegraph.

Mathew Scott writes:
'In an internet trial there are no rules of evidence, no right to insist on answers to questions or even to know the identity of the accuser.  “Nick” is anonymous and as a result almost beyond criticism.  Why did he contact Exaro in the first place?  Did he seek them out, or did they go out and find him?  If the latter, why and how? Has he been paid for his story?  Exaro has not revealed.  Why did he wait until 2014 before contacting the police?  Why, for example, did he not do so in 1987 when Mr Proctor was very publicly implicated in what was then regarded as a “gay sex” scandal?  Why, as Mr Proctor asked, was a representative from Exaro permitted to be present when he was interviewed by the police?   Exaro, again, has not revealed.'

 
This short-circuiting of the legal process seems to be becoming all too common, in a letter in tomorrow's Rochdale Observer, a critic of the Rochdale MP, Simon Danczuk, Les May questions the politician's involvement with officers from the Leicester Police force who Mr. Danczuk in a speech to the House of Commons reported to be 'furious' at a decision of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) not to prosecute Lord Janner.  Mr. May who resides in the Rochdale area writes:
'On July 25, 2015, Mr Danczuk received a payment of £10,000 from the owners of The Sun for an article he had contributed to... [and] he declined to say which article the cash related to.'


Les May further points out that 'Mr Danczuk is MP for Rochdale, not a constituency that is within the Leicester Police area.' 
And he asks:
'Was the intention to use an extra judicial method of bring pressure on the DPP ...?'


In the case of Harvey Proctor last December the police officer leading the investigation, detective superintendent Kenny McDonald even announced on the BBC that he believed that the victim 'Nicks' allegations to be 'credible and true'


The journalist, Mathew Scott in the Telegraph, rightly questions this statement from a police officer:
'It was a disgraceful statement. McDonald's job is to investigate, not to judge and most certainly not to broadcast his opinion.  Expressing any opinion about the truthfulness of a witness would – as he knows perfectly well – be inadmissible and improper even in the controlled environment of a trial.  To announce on national television that you believe a suspect is guilty of multiple rape and murder, before a single body has been found, and months before speaking to Mr Proctor, suggests a mind-boggling level of prejudice and foolishness.'


While no laws may have been broken in either of these cases, and in the case of Mr Proctor there has been no technical breach because he has not been charged, but the spirit of fairness and justice is being damaged.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/11823190/Harvey-Proctor-accuses-police-of-homosexual-witch-hunt-over-paedophile-ring-murder-claims.html  

Friday, 14 November 2014

Russell Brand's 'Revolution' Part 2.

12 November 2014


Russell Brand's 'Revolution'

- Part 2,

The Backlash



 From Messiah

To Monty Python

If Julian Assange was initially perceived by many as a
controversial but respected, even heroic, figure challenging
power, the corporate media worked hard to change that
perception in the summer of 2012.  After Assange requested
political asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy
in London, the faux-feminists and corporate leftists of the
'quality' liberal press waged war on his reputation.
This comment from the Guardian's Deborah Orr summed up
the press zeitgeist: 
'It's hard to believe that, until fairly recently, Julian Assange
was hailed not just as a radical thinker, but as a radical achiever,
too.'
A sentiment echoed by Christina Patterson of the Independent
'Quite a feat to move from Messiah to Monty Python, but good old
Julian Assange seems to have managed it.'
The Guardian's Suzanne Moore expressed what many implied: 
'He really is the most massive turd.'
The attacks did more than just criticise Assange; they presented
him as a ridiculous, shameful figure.  Readers were to understand
that he was now completely and permanently discredited.
We are all, to some extent, herd animals. When we witness an
individual being subjected to relentless mockery of this kind from
just about everyone across the media 'spectrum', it becomes a real
challenge to continue taking that person seriously, let alone to
continue supporting them. We know that doing so risks attracting
the same abuse.
Below, we will see how many of the same corporate journalists
are now directing a comparable campaign of abuse at Russell Brand
in response to the publication of his book, 'Revolution'. The impact
is perhaps indicated by the mild trepidation one of us experienced in
tweeting this very reasonable comment from the book: 
'Today humanity faces a stark choice: save the planet and ditch
capitalism, or save capitalism and ditch the planet.' (p.345)
Sure enough, we immediately received this tweet in response: 
'As a big supporter of your newsletters and books, I'm embarrassed
by your promotion of Brand as some sort of visionary.'
Mark Steel explained in the Independent
'This week, by law, I have to deride Russell Brand as a self-obsessed,
annoying idiot. No article or comment on Twitter can legally be written
now unless it does this...'
Or as Boris Johnson noted, gleefully, in the Telegraph
'Oh dear, what a fusillade of hatred against poor old Brandy Wandy.
I have before me a slew of Sunday papers and in almost all there is a
broadside against Russell Brand...'
Once again, the Guardian gatekeepers have poured scorn. Suzanne
Moore lampooned 'the winklepickered Jesus Clown who preaches
revolution', repeating 'Jesus Clown' four times. Moore mocked: 
'To see him being brought to heel by an ancient Sex Pistol definitely
adds to the gaiety of the nation.'
After all: 'A lot of what he says is sub-Chomskyian [sic] woo.'
An earlier version of Moore's article was even more damning: 'A lot
of what he says is ghostwritten sub-Chomskyian woo.'
This was corrected by the Guardian after Moore received a letter from
Brand's lawyers.
The Guardian's Hadley Freeman imperiously dismissed Brand's highly
rational analysis of corporate psychopathology: 
'I'm not entirely sure where he thinks he's going to go with this revolution
idea because [SPOILER!] revolution is not going to happen. But all credit
to the man for making politics seem sexy to teenagers.  What he lacks,
though - aside from specifics and an ability to listen to people other than              
himself - is  judgment.'
Tanya Gold commented in the Guardian
'His narcissism is not strange: he is a comic by trade, and is used to
drooling rooms of strangers.'
In the Independent, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown's patronising judgement
was clear from the title:  'Russell Brand might seem like a sexy revolutionary
worth getting behind, but he will only fail his fans - Politics needs to be
cleaned up, not thrown into disarray by irresponsible populists'
Alibhai-Brown commented: 
'It is heartening to see him mobbed by teenagers and young people... Brand,
I fear, will only fail them.'
Grace Dent of the Independent perceived little point in throwing yet more
mud: 
'with the lack of a political colossus on the horizon like Tony Benn, we
can make do with that guy from Get Him To The Greek who was once wed
to Katy Perry. I shall resist pillorying Brand any further. He looks exhausted.
I'm not entirely evil'.
Sarah Ditum sneered from the New Statesman
'Russell Brand, clown that he is, is taken seriously by an awful lot of young
men who see any criticism of the cartoon messiah's misogyny as a derail from
"the real issues" (whatever they are).'
Brand fared little better among the male commentators of the liberal press.
The title
of David Runciman's Guardian review read: 
'His manifesto is heavy going, light on politics and, in places, beyond parody.
Has the leader of the rebellion missed his moment?'
Runciman wrote: 
'This book is an uncomfortable mashup of the cosmic and the prosaic.
Brand seems to believe they bolster each other. But really they just get
in each other's way. He borrows ideas from various radical or progressive
thinkers like David Graeber and Thomas Piketty but undercuts them with
talk about yogic meditation.'
As we saw in the first part of this alert, there is a strong case for arguing that
mindfulness – awareness of how we actually feel, as opposed to how corporate
advertising tells us we should feel – can help deliver us from the shiny cage of
 passive consumerism to progressive activism.
Alas, 'too often he sounds like Gwyneth Paltrow without, er, the humour or
the self-awareness. The worst of it is beyond parody... his revolution reads
like soft-soap therapy where what's needed is something with a harder edge'.
Also in the Guardian, Martin Kettle dismissed 'the juvenile culture of Russell
Brand's narcissistic anti-politics'.
Hard-right 'leftist' warmonger Nick Cohen of the 'left-of-centre' hard-right
Observer was appalled. Having accumulated 28,000 followers on Twitter
(we have 18,000) after decades in the national press spotlight, Cohen mocked
the communication skills of a writer with 8 million followers: 
'His writing is atrocious: long-winded, confused and smug; filled with
references to books Brand alas half read and thinkers he has half understood.'
This is completely false, as we saw; Brand has an extremely astute grasp of
many of the key issues of our time.
As ever – think Assange, Greenwald, Snowden – dissidents are exposed as
egoists by corporate media altruists:  'Brand is a religious narcissist, and if the
British left falls for him, it will show itself to be beyond saving.'
Cohen strained so hard to cover Brand in ordure he splashed some on himself,
commenting: 
'Brand says that he is qualified to lead a global transformation...'
Not quite. Brand writes in his book: 
'We don't want to replace Cameron with another leader: the position of
leader elevates a particular set of behaviours.' (p.216)
And: 
'There is no heroic revolutionary figure in whom we can invest hope, except
for ourselves as individuals together.' (p.515)
Similarly, Cohen took the cheap shot of casually lampooning Brand's 'cranky'
focus on meditation: 
'Comrades, I am sure I do not need to tell you that no figure in the history
of the left has seen Buddhism as a force for human emancipation.'
We tweeted in reply
'@NickCohen4 "no figure in the history of the left has seen Buddhism as a force for
human emancipation". Erich Fromm, for one.'
Cohen was so unimpressed by this response that he immediately blocked us
on Twitter.  Writing from that other powerhouse of corporate dissent, the
oligarch-owned Independent, Steve Richards praised Brand's style and decried
the right-wing conformity of journalism, before providing an example of his own.
He lamented Brand's 'vague banalities' and 'witty banalities'
'He is part of a disturbing phenomenon - the worship of unaccountable comedians
who are not especially funny and who are limited in their perceptions... We await
revolutionary who plots what should happen as well as what is wrong.'

In the same newspaper, Howard Jacobson effortlessly won the prize for intellectual
snobbery:  'When Russell Brand uses the word "hegemony" something dies in my
soul.'
Oh dear, does he drop the 'haitch'?  For Jacobson, who studied English at
Cambridge under the renowned literary critic F.R. Leavis, it was 'a matter of
regret' that Brand didn't 'stick to clowning'

Why? Because it detracts from the enjoyment of a comedian's efforts 'to discover
they are fools in earnest'. Brand, alas, has not 'the first idea what serious thought is'.
To
read the book is to know just how utterly self-damning that last comment is. 

James Bloodworth of the hard-right Left Foot Forward blog, commented in the
Independent
'Russell Brand is one of those people who talks a lot without ever really saying
much.'
Bloodworth clumsily sought to mock Brand's clumsiness: 
'Well-intentioned, he can often come across like the precocious student we
all know who talks in the way they think an educated person ought to talk -
all clever-sounding adjectives and look-at-me vocabulary.'
Words like 'hegemony', perhaps. Or as Nick Cohen wrote in 2013: 'He writes
as if he is a precocious prepubescent rather than an adolescent...'
Bloodworth's damning conclusion: 
'Millions of people may be fed up of the racket that is free market capitalism,
but this really is Revolution as play, and in indulging it the left risks becoming
a parody of itself.'

The Tory Press – 'A Snort Of Derisive Laughter'

If we dare turn to the more overtly right-wing press, in the Sunday Times, Camilla
Long lamented
'Brand's mincing tintinnabulations, his squawking convulsions, his constant garbling
of  words such as "autodidact" and "hegemony".'
That word again! Could the real problem be that a working class author has
appropriated words reserved for his classically-educated betters? Wikipedia records
of Long: 
'Descended from the aristocratic Clinton family (Henry Pelham-Clinton, 4th Duke of
Newcastle... is an ancestor through her paternal grandmother), she was educated at              
Oxford High School and Corpus Christi College, Oxford.'
Again, any thought of discussion had to make way for mockery:  'And what a
mediocre, hypocritical, dancing, prancing and arrogant perm on a stick he is...
I would be more comfortable with the former Spice Girl Geri Halliwell as a public
intellectual.'
From the moral summit of Murdoch's media Mount Doom, Perpetual Warmonger
David Aaronovitch of The Times of course declared Brand's book 'uniquely worthless
both as an exercise in writing and as a manifesto for social change - I feel able to            
dismiss Brand's new self-ascriptions, both as self-taught man and revolutionary'.
(Aaronovitch, 'A unique Brand of dozy drivel,' The Times, November 1, 2014) 

Again, as we saw in Part 1, this is just false. There may be much to debate, but in
identifying the fundamental disaster of a corporate system subordinating people and
planet to profit, Brand is exactly right.
Aaronovitch heard only 'a wall of sound and words designed to drown out the
possibility of thought'

But the wall of sound was coming from Aaronovitch's own head, from the
psychological investments that prevent him perceiving words that would make
it impossible for him to continue the role he is playing.
For Aaronovitch, like Cohen, it was all 'sub-Yoko mysticana that [has] been the
"it's really all about me" staple of pop stars, actors and princesses since the days
of the Maharishi'.
So Brand just produces 'sub-Yoko mysticana', 'sub-Chomskyian woo' and, as
Robert Colvile noted in his review for the Daily Telegraph, 'sub-undergraduate
dross'

Reviewing the book in the Sunday Times, Christopher Hart wrote
'There's no doubt that Brand can sometimes articulate what a lot of people
are feeling...'
As if panicked by the possibility that this might be thought to signify approval,
Hart erupted: 
'But when the cry comes from someone who seems the epitome of a vapid,
ill-informed, coke-frazzled, self-adoring and grossly hypocritical celeb,
preaching to us from the back of his chauffeur-driven Merc, then the only
response it deserves is a snort of derisive laughter.'
Parklife! The bottom line:
'Some of this stuff does indeed need saying, but Russell Brand is not the man
to say it.'
Again, less a review, more a Soviet-style 'personality disorder' smear.
The Daily Mail really loathes Brand. For the journalist who for some odd
reason describes himself as 'The Hated Peter Hitchens', Brand is a 'Pied
piper who peddles poison'. It seems clear that some of the hatred directed
at Brand by both male and female critics is rooted in something other than
politics.  In a telling passage that reads like an outtake from a Carry On film,
Hitchens observed:  'But there's also no doubt he has a potent effect on
women - I watched him, in less than a minute, charm two pretty young Olympic
medal winners into taking off their medals and draping them over his scrawny,
naked chest.  The sad thing was that they acted as if they were the ones being
honoured by the encounter.'
We can imagine that Hitchens would have been only too 'honoured' to meet
the 'two pretty young' women and to admire the medals on their chests where
they belonged.  In the same paper, Stephen Glover also snorted derisively: 
'Why does anyone take this clown of a poseur seriously?... Russell Brand is a
ludicrous charlatan.' 

Glover, who had either not read, or not understood a word of the book,
commented: 
'Revolution is one of the worst books I have ever read. It is repetitive,
structureless, poorly argued (if it can be said to be argued at all) and
boring... [from] our narcissistic hero... Why should we listen to this            
clown?'
Another Daily Mail altruist, Max Hastings, also perceived gross egotism
at play: 
'Mr Brand is a strutting narcissist, who, despite having no idea what he
is talking about...'
For the now thoroughly corporatised Piers Morgan in the Mail, Brand was
a 'bogus revolutionary... this whole "revolution" he's trying to wage is a load
of old sanctimonious hog-wash'. Morgan was happy to sign-off with a lazy
dismissal:  'Like most great revolutionaries, he's quite happy wallowing in
his own hypocrisy.'
The Mail quoted James Cleverly, Conservative London Assembly Member
for Bexley and Bromley: 
'Why do the BBC give so much airtime to the vacuous, narcissistic drivel
of Russell Brand?'
We tweeted Cleverly: 'Exactly how often do you see a Brand-style,
anti-corporate perspective on the BBC? Every day?'
Cleverly did not respond.

The Mail also noted that Conservative MP Philip Davies, a member of
the Culture, Media and Sport select committee, had demanded that the
corporation look again at its public service remit: 'Why on earth are BBC
giving so much air time to such an idiot is beyond me. Especially on such              
supposedly serious programmes.  I just don't think that's what the BBC is
there for. It is not there to give idiots like Russell Brand time to promote
his book.'
Boris Johnson wrote in the Daily Telegraph
'Of course his manifesto is nonsense - as I am sure he would be only too
happy, in private, to admit... Yes, it is bilge; but that is not the point.
Who cares what he really means or what he really thinks?'
For this was 'semi-religious pseudoeconomic mumbo-jumbo'.
Again, another busy individual who had surely not troubled to seriously
read the book.  As with Assange, the intent and effect of all this is to portray
Brand as so ridiculous, so pitiable, that the public will feel ashamed to be
associated with him and his cause. 

The corporate media system, with its fraudulent 'spectrum' of opinion, is a
hammer that falls with a unified, resounding crash on anyone who dares to
challenge elite interests. It works relentlessly to beat down human imagination,
creativity and hope, to smash the awareness, love and compassion that might
otherwise terminate the 'nightmare of history'. Is resistance futile? Will they
always win?
Well, for once, we will give the corporate press the last word. On November 7,
the Daily Mail reported that Brand's new book 'has enjoyed monumental sales
- earning the star and his publishers a staggering £230,000 in just 11 days'.
The Mail, no doubt reluctantly, cited a publishing expert:  'It's an awful lot
of money to turnaround in such a short period.'
Unmentioned by the Mail, Brand has said that profits from the book will
go towards a non-hierarchical, not-for-profit café and production company
managed by the workforce 'where recovering addicts like me can run a
business based on the ideas in this book'. (p.593)
DE 
Contact Us:
editor@medialens.org 

Sent to Northern Voices by Trevor Hoyle.