Monday, 6 November 2017

Parallelograms

From a familiar, external, conscious world the song Parallelograms by Linda Perhacs plummets the listener into an intuitive, Finnegans Wake, collective unconscious, dream world.

It speaks of the language and syntax of reality, explicitly through mention of geometry and biology and implicitly through its audial transition from a melodious, familiar dimension to a discordant, unfamiliar dimension.

The hidden dimension this song addresses may be described as the structural matrix and bedrock of reality. In the same way that we create two-dimensional images and fictional realities it can be said that a higher dimensional reality creates us and our three-dimensional world.

As a musical genre psychedelic folk is an apt way to express such insight. The folk element evokes old, rural, communal and spiritual tradtions and does so in a mysterious and beautiful way. The psychedelic element updates the folk aspect, employing electronic sounds and musical experimentation and embedding it in the historical and cultural context in which it was made. There is thus a melding of ancient and modern, tradition and revolution, continuity and change.

That Parallelograms, the song and the album of the same name, was largely ignored when first released in 1970 is testament to the overall commercialism and vapidity of the music industry and the ignorance of a society unable to perceive raw artistry and deep insight into the nature of existence.

Friday, 4 August 2017

The Least Among us

"We are led by the least among us
                                     - Terence McKenna


I've grown tired of arguing against the Conservatives. Is it not abundantly clear that their fundamental policies have always maintained or increased an extreme rich-poor divide and fuelled perpetual war and hatred? The Conservatives show no signs whatsoever of changing their fundamental policies, so clearly they show no signs of ending poverty, war and hatred.

One of the main arguments of the Conservatives is that they are the only party who can deliver a "strong economy". What is meant by "strong economy"? I rarely here this phrase explained in a reasonable, intelligent way. From a non-technical standpoint and judging simply by the hard evidence of many years of Conservative rule, including New Labour, it seems that the Conservatives' "strong economy" invariably equates to a staggering divide between the rich and poor. So in what sense do they mean "strong"? The Conservatives champion and preside over an economic system that allows one individual to be worth £9.5 billion and, simultaneously, for homelessness to rise. Is this not enough to make the population understand? It doesn't take an intellectual to understand that there is something inherently wrong with a political party and system that allows this to happen.

Even if economic efficiency was defined in terms of cold, abstract logic, the Conservatives do not deliver. Neoliberalism, the Conservatives' ruling ideology and economic system, their sine ne qua non, led to the 2008 financial crash. In other words it collapsed. Neoliberalism was started by Margaret Thatcher, the ultimate Conservative, the Conservatives' idol, and was continued by Tony Blair and New Labour. Blair and New Labour were, according to Thatcher, her greatest achievements. So even in cold, ruthless terms the Conservatives aren't worth voting for.

Humane political parties do exist. They won't solve every problem and they may have to operate in a toxic global climate for a while but who knows, maybe they'll set an example? Maybe they'll show people another way? Societal change has to start somewhere.

Saturday, 15 July 2017

Why Might Momentum be an Object of Criticism?

I don't usually think in terms of left-wing or right-wing. I prefer more concrete terms; fair, unfair, sensitive, insensitive, empathetic, unempathetic. These terms carry more weight and meaning for me.

Alan Johnson has recently argued that Momentum is a "hard-left" group infiltrating the Labour party, drawing comparisons with the 1980s group Militant. But, as I constantly find in the popular press, this view isn't backed up. Johnson doesn't provide any circumstances or situations to show that Momentum is an extreme or militant group. His view is thus invalid.

Johnson also doesn't consider his view from different sides. Perhaps Momentum is around to combat the high levels of class injustice and inequality in our society and the waging of perpetual war, which is rife and which we aren't properly informed about it. In this sense his argument isn't remotely intelligent or sensitive.

Similarly Tom Watson and Neil Kinnock talk of "Trotskyists" infiltrating the Labour party without adequate explanation or exploration of what a "Trotskyist" is. I thus get the impression that this phrase is a scare tactic, like "hard-left", and when one delves into it one finds that it doesn't have any meaning. The popular press is full of such empty phrases and scare tactics. Much of the world-population thus end up living their lives based on a vapid and abstract political rhetoric perpetuated by self-serving individuals and a biased media. 

I wonder if Kinnock and Watson spoke out against Tony Blair in the same way they have with Momentum? Or even Ed Miliband who aimed to continue with austerity? One has to assume that Kinnock and Watson are promoters and members of the British establishment. The establishment, for the record, does not have the will or desire of the wider population at heart.

What does infiltrate even mean? Are any of our Labour MPs militant Trotskyists? Are militant Trotskyists going to take over UK government? I think it's far more relevant and beneficial to discuss and criticise Blairites and New Labour MPs who for many years had an overwhelming stranglehold on the Labour party, and probably still do to a minor extent, and whose record, such as the Iraq war and the promotion and practise of neoliberalism, is shameful.

Even if "hard-left" groups did exist and did have negative intentions, as it currently stands we have far more pressing problems that need to be addressed. We have the destruction of coral reefsrising greenhouse gaseslivestock emissions, the swift disappearance of many animal speciesclass inequalitymistreatment of disabled people and perpetual war, all resulting from insensitive and neoliberal, one might say right-wing, governments. In light of these catastrophes, that are occurring right now as a result of Western governments that have been in power continuously for many years, "hard-left" groups are not something I'm worried about.

It is funny when people talk of "hard-left" groups, as Americans do with Communists, when all we've had in Britain and the U.S for many years are right-wing governments. When you look at the records of such right-wing governments - ongoing wars in the Middle East, rising class inequality, nurses using food banks in the UK, private healthcare in the U.S, the nuclear destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the U.S, the Vietnam war by the U.S, ongoing environmental devastation - you realise that an alternative form of government is needed.

As far as I'm concerned our society is fundamentally skewed and oppressive and when genuine beneficial change presents itself most of our politicians and media-outlets instinctively try to obliterate it.

Monday, 10 July 2017

Establishment Media with Reference to UK Politics

Before commenting on politics it's important to bear in mind that popular and establishment media create an image of reality that is often highly inaccurate. Many people, understandably, think and make decisions largely based on this inaccurate image. 

Honesty, accuracy, evidence and fairness are thus regularly absent from establishment media. The reasons for this are very complex and have much to do with maintaining a divide between the rich and poor. 

These points are tied up with spin and political rhetoric, which is about fooling people into liking and voting for you. Spin and political rhetoric is often about creating an inaccurate, abstract, negative and unfounded image of an opponent and is often about evading honesty, transparency and directness.

I feel that not only the wider population but many of our politicians buy into the political rhetoric they use and the abstract, unfounded notions of society that they promulgate. For example, I do think that most Conservatives feel that they are "working in the national interest" or that "living within our means" is a fair thing to say. But these phrases are part of an abstract political rhetoric that isn't tied to reality. I would describe believing in political rhetoric and distorted veneers of reality as some kind of mass delusion fed and sustained by a powerful, biased and reality-reversing media.

One of Friedrich Nietzsche's primary insights is that many of humanity's cherished ideas and views are motivated by shadowy instincts, drives and desires. The Conservatives' ideas and views, for example, are motivated by greed and insecurity. Such ideas and views are dressed up in a palatable way, "living within our means" kind of seems reasonable on the surface, but their essential meaning is bound up with greed and fear. In a more accurate rendition, living within our means is actually saying that "we aren't going to address the deep power and class imbalance of society but are going to steal money from those who need it most". 

When ideas and views are bound up with insecure self-serving drives you can expect volatile reactions. For example, David Cameron erupted in PMQs on the issue of Jeremy Corbyn's leadership, shouting "It might be in my party’s interest for him to sit there. It’s not in the national interest... for heaven's sake man, go!" This reaction occurred because Corbyn represents a threat to the societal maintenance and dominance of the rich-elite, which is based on their self-serving insecure drives. When the rich-elite are faced with a character like Corbyn they thus lash out in an irrational way. This also explains Alan Sugar'sRichard Branson's and Rupert Murdoch's hatred of Corbyn.

The abstraction of reality that occurs with the application of political rhetoric and inaccuracy in the popular media also leads to desensitisation and depersonalisation. We are presented with a thin distorted layer of reality and aren't able to adequately connect with actual reality. In my view this occurs to an extent with any media, as media or language slides between people and the rawness of reality and can end up disconnecting us from the truth of our inner and outer worlds.

Rhetoric, inaccuracy and spin encourage increased detachment or desensitisation as they aren't about exploring and revealing truths. They are about manipulating people, distorting events, scaremongering, ignoring happenings and/or presenting situations in a one-dimensional way. The result is that we aren't able to properly connect with many events occurring in the world. This, I think, is partly why we have a PM who holds a first strike nuclear policy.

I don't think Theresa May emotionally understands the consequences of using nuclear weapons. Similarly Micheal Fallon, the Conservative Defence Secretary, holds an insensitive attitude towards military action. Fallon offers complete support for future military action in Syria to a government responsible for this. He must not remotely empathise with the many civilians that have died in the Middle East as a consequence of our foreign policy and he must not realise that our approach is fuelling perpetual war, hatred and extremism. If May was present for the atom bombing of Hiroshima and had family who died there and if Fallon had witnessed and had family who died in a military attack in Yemen they would, I'm sure, think differently about nuclear weaponry and military intervention.

Violence and death, then, have been depersonalised and we have been emotionally desensitised to horrific issues. This is why it is refreshing and inspiring, for me, that Corbyn is so reluctant to use military action. Presumably Corbyn is sensitive and empathetic to issues of violence and sees military action as a last resort. He genuinely prioritises diplomacy and dialogue. As far as I'm concerned he is a responsible and humane politician, seemingly a rare phenomenon.

In order to develop and flower as a society enough people need to understand the bias of establishment media and enough people need to be able to separate bullshit from accuracy, honesty from lies, substance from vapidity, spin from sincerity.

Thursday, 6 July 2017

Concrete Issues with Reference to Jeremy Corbyn

I'm not left-wing, right-wing, feminist or marxist. I'm not trying to sell you an ideology. I'm not part of an institution. I'm an individual intuitively responding to perceived injustice and corruption.

When it comes to commenting on societal matters I think it's vital not to segregate yourself in a convoluted, academic, drawn-out and abstract verbal bubble.

It's also important to take control of knowledge where possible and to have the confidence to talk about matters without necessarily having a university degree in them. This is where the internet can be so brilliant and inspiring.

When it comes to Jeremy Corbyn I think the important things to remember are that he and his party want to reinvigorate the NHS, are anti-austerity, anti-privatisation of public services and have a thoroughly empathetic, sensitive, caring and forward-looking approach to foreign policy.

There are obviously a lot of complexities involved but honestly, at this point in time, the latter points are the things that matter. They are policies and attitudes that actually want to alleviate concrete issues happening right now.

It's easy for a commentator who isn't affected by disability work assessments, who doesn't have to go to a food bank, who isn't a Syrian whose family has been killed by US airstrikes or a Yemeni mother whose children have been killed by UK weapons to criticise Corbyn for pointless, abstract or trivial matters.

The elite and their vicious media chums have really done a number on the world population. They seem to have taken away an ability to empathise, emotionally connect and think freely about the world. In this sense, in the sense of how our minds work, we are caged and imprisoned.

Thursday, 29 June 2017

8 Cases of Recent Conservative Hypocrisy

The cases are getting to be so many now... The following are 8 cases of Conservative hypocrisy that have occurred in the last couple of months.

1 - After all her posturing and vapid platitudes Theresa May's oh so strong and stable government is looking, even in the popular press, to be intensely weak and unstable. They've scrapped most of their election promises, are clinging to power with a backward political party, are having the manifestations of austerity publicly flung into their faces and didn't nearly achieve what they set out to in the general election. Jeremy Corbyn and Labour's stability, consistency and resilience, however, are becoming harder and harder to dispute.

2 - In an interview with Andrew Neil May accused Corbyn of scare-mongering in order to "sneak into number 10". Thus in the same breath as accusing Corbyn of scaremongering May herself was scaremongering, saying that Corbyn aims, like some deceitful unworthy villain, to become PM. For May and the Conservatives to accuse Corbyn and Labour of scaremongering and to imply that they were underhanded and deceitful in their election campaign is shockingly hypocritical, seeing as though the Conservative campaign was particularly vicious, dishonest and dirty and overwhelmingly based on fear and hate. Contrariwise, Labour's campaign was overwhelmingly based on hope, optimism and positivity and did not resort to personal attacks or relentless character assassinations.

3 - Boris Johnson, along with May and Michael Fallon, vehemently disagreed with Corbyn when he made a speech connecting our foreign policy to terrorism. Corbyn's speech, however, is an iteration of what Johnson himself said the past.

4 - The Conservatives accused Corbyn of being a terrorist sympathiser with reference to the IRA and are now getting into bed with a Northern Ireland political party, the DUP, associated with terrorism. Whats more, Corbyn was accused of sympathising with the IRA because he was involved in peace negotiations with Northern Ireland during "The Troubles". These negotiations led to the Good Friday Agreement and Theresa May's deal with the DUP puts this very agreement, meaning peace between Britain and Northern Ireland, in jeopardy (see links below). The Conservatives in their election campaign went so far as distorting footage of Corbyn so that it seemed like he didn't condemn the IRA.

5 - May and her government claimed Corbyn was a terrorist sympathiser with Hamas and Hezbollah too, even though May and the Conservatives sell arms to Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia are bombing Yemen, practising and promoting extremist ideologies and funded IS. Also as Home Secretary May allowed the alleged Manchester attacker Salman Abedi to travel across Europe and not be monitored, even though the FBI warned MI5 about him. The hypocrisy here is staggering. There is a connection between the Conservative government and the Manchester and London Bridge terror attacks. May has defended our ties with Saudi Arabia and has not promised to stop selling them arms. Corbyn, on the other hand, has said we should halt arms sales to them.

6 - May and her party used the word "magic money tree" many, many times during their election campaign to disparage the Labour party's spending in their (fully costed) manifesto, but now the Conservatives have somehow found £1.5 billion to strike a deal with the DUP. In spite of austerity continuing unabated the Conservatives can always conveniently locate money for their self-serving activities.

7 - Conservative MPs and May praised the fire-service and police for their brave efforts in Grenfell Tower and the recent UK terror attacks but, in spite of Labour's amendment, have decided to continue with cuts to these services and the pay cap on public sector workers. This ties in with the last example too. There is no magic money tree when it comes to paying our brave service people a decent wage but there is when it comes to striking a deal with a backward political party. To stand there and praise our public service people, scoring political points, and not genuinely take any action to improve their lives (when you have the money to) is disgraceful. Corbyn and his party, for the record, genuinely want to take action to help our service people, including nurses, the police, the armed forces and our fire services.

8 - May and her government warned frequently of a coalition of chaos during their election campaign with reference to Labour and other parties and have now struck a deal with a political party who have connections with terrorism, who don't believe women have the right to abortion, who don't believe in LGBT rights and whose previous environment minister denied climate change.

As far as I'm concerned, in light of these points one has to concede that the Conservatives are deceitful, manipulative, self-serving and particularly hypocritical.

Links

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/live/2017/jun/15/theresa-may-northern-ireland-talks-dup-deal-delayed-politics-live

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/election-2017-john-major-theresa-may-conservatives-dup-deal-violence-northern-ireland-a7787681.html

Tuesday, 27 June 2017

The Conservatives Rely on Hate, Fear and Vapid Slogans

With their powerful establishment-media the Conservatives have made many, many shameful attempts to assassinate the characters of Jeremy Corbyn, Diane Abbott and John McDonnell. They have incited fear in the public that these people are terrorist sympathisers. They have distorted footage of Corbyn, lied about Abbott and painted all these figures as evil hateful villains who couldn't possibly run our country. These are sick, regressive and shameful tactics. The accusation that these figures are terrorist sympathisers is ironic, funny and infuriating because it is Theresa May and her government that arms, supports and does deals with terrorists.

The amount of times the Conservatives attacked Corbyn in their 2017 election campaign was pretty shocking. Repeating statements like "can you imagine Jeremy Corbyn running our country?" "Jeremy Corbyn would wreck our economy" "Jeremy Corbyn is a terrorist sympathiser." Here they feed and rely on an inaccurate and distorted media-impression of Corbyn that sees him as incompetent, unrealistic and dangerous. There is no evidence to back this impression up.

The Conservatives' vapid slogans are pretty hilarious and various (but also kind of scary) and deserve a whole article or essay devoted to them alone. Such slogans are cooked up by Lynton Crosby and other Conservative PR people and are probably required to be used a certain number of times in debates and interviews. To keep it brief, let's look at "magic money tree". Magic money tree was used to belittle Labour and the spending in their manifesto. It is passed off as an economic insight when really it has no meaning. It is used because it is easy for many people to absorb and repeat. It is funny that Labour's manifesto was fully costed, unlike the Conservatives'. It is also funny that the Conservatives don't seem to care about tax avoidance with the mega-rich and can always find money when it comes to military intervention and renewing Trident. The most recent example of extreme hypocrisy in this case is that the Conservatives have conveniently located their magic money tree, finding £1.5 billion to do a deal with a bigoted Northern Ireland party associated with terrorism.

There are a number of reasons why the Conservatives rely on hate, fear and vapid slogans.

One is that, as a party, they have few positive policies themselves. Many of the core policies from their 2017 manifesto have been abandoned, in terms of the triple lock on pensions, dementia tax, fox hunting, school meals and grammar schools.

Two is that they are too incompetent and insensitive to appeal to the wider population in a meaningful and positive way.  Thus, in order to garner votes, they must ruthlessly attack a person's character and deceive and manipulate the public.

Three is that, by inciting fear, they make people scared of meaningful change or transformation. Corbyn and his party symbolise meaningful change in a number of areas. The Conservatives exploited this, saying that he will destroy our country or wreak havoc on the economy.

Four is that they infantilise and destabilise the population so that they can manipulate them with vapid slogans. By inciting fear and hate the Conservatives encourage people to be very single-minded and insecure. When a person is scared or insecure they don't think intelligently or rationally and are thus susceptible to vapid slogans.

Five is that when a vapid slogan is repeated enough times in the popular press, like a mantra, it gains validity in people's minds.

Though I believe their effect is waning, we can't ignore that 13.6 million voted Conservative in the general election. We need to keep sharing our views as much as possible. We can't forget what the Conservatives have done and we can't neglect what they continue to do.

Western Values

  A certain narrative ha s become more prominent in recent times , with various well-known proponents . T his narrative tell s us that ...