Thursday, May 7, 2015

Re: Mind's Eye Re: Cops and robbers

Professional agitators are difficult. First you have to locate them. . But then the real hard work begins. . As Molly said. You need to follow the money no matter where it leads.. a dedicated  team litterly leaving no stone unturned..  but that can take years.. one other question  needs to be asked is who benefits. .(for whatever reason no matter  how illogical. ) that can be difficult at best.
I am not sure the desire is really there.. it seems with the emphasis on war, murder and killing in games and movies. . It is as if there is a deliberate demoralising of society. . Just what is the purpose?

تجنب. القتل والاغتصاب واستعباد الآخرين
Avoid; murder, rape and enslavement of others

-----Original Message-----
From: Molly <mollyb363@gmail.com>
To: minds-eye@googlegroups.com, nwterry@gmail.com
Cc: francis.hunt@gmail.com
Sent: Thu, 07 May 2015 12:46 PM
Subject: Mind's Eye Re: Cops and robbers

In Detroit there is a park on the riverfront adjacent to the convention center where most of the public demonstrations are permitted. Once the weather warms up, there is generally some group there every week picketing something. I even saw a Canadian group picketing clubbing of baby seals (Detroit is the only place on the map that is north of Canada and just across the river.) The protest for hire group only shows up where there is the possibility of stirring the racial divide between whites and African Americans in the US. They stir anger up into a frenzy like a baptist service. Would love to know what is really behind it.

Baltimore has all of the same indications that Detroit had in the sixties. Folks here still feel the scars, and business is just starting to come back but the reasons for that are more political than economic. the police force here has just ended a two decade oversite by the Feds for brutal treatment of the public and complaints against it. Homeland security and several other federal organizations still work hand and hand with local police, as they do in Baltimore and other unstable cities. But I am not sure that you can extrapolate these cases as indicative of all police/public relations across the US. I have also seen the social media monitoring work to squelch gang trouble in public events several times here, and think it valuable. If anyone is really bothering to follow me personally, physically or digitally, they are very bored and wasting their time and resources. I don't fear this.

Community organization, I still think, is the key to peace anywhere. I suspect Baltimore had little of it and know Detroit has a bit more but not much. It takes real and rare leadership to pull off, especially in a major metropolitan area. And the outside agitators target unstable communities - why bother to go where your tactics will not work?

On Wednesday, May 6, 2015 at 7:29:36 PM UTC-4, archytas wrote:
I'd start the economists off with much more general education.  This would be an example - http://wphna.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/WN-2015-06-03-170-183-George-Kent-How-to-end-hunger.pdf.  

Hunger is at root a social problem, its extent and degree heavily influenced by human relationships of compassion, indifference, or exploitation.
Only 30% of the world's food supply is produced on industrial farms, while half of the world's cultivated food is produced by peasants. More than 12% comes from hunting and gathering while more than 7% is produced in city gardens. 
The notion that there is a tremendous exchange happening between countries for food crops is incorrect, as 85% of the people in this world live on a domestic diet. 
The Industrial Food Chain uses 70% of the world's agricultural resources to produce just 30% of our global food supply. Conversely, the Peasant Food Web provides 70% of the global food supply while using only 30% of agricultural resources.The pre-modern is not just ancient history. It is alive and doing well in much of the world, but it gets little attention. (from the short article)

Various riots across the world including the ones that seem to spring from our black communities have an element of mob rule that is about some kind of threat to the Establishment - an attempt at some kind of control of now largely perverted leadership.  Tony's point is only part of what mob rule might be about, not unlike Francis' on the end of the revolutionary road.  We need to be aware that crying freedom is complicated.  I get to vote tomorrow and have no one to vote for (Greens will get my X) and have heard no sense in the campaign.  Not being able to vote would be even worse.

I point to hunger because I'm struck we have similar language problems in the area of the riots - very few facts to work with in Francis' world of a thousand compromises and the rock and the hard place.  One might add to this thousands of organisational reorganisations that don't work either and end up in today's weird financialisation..

The riots don't seem very fact based - yet if we could talk directly to people involved (the agony of main media of course intervenes) we might understand more.  Even this is grasped in our own frame of ignorance and false education.  And to get the facts we need detectives of some kind.  There are usually facts to find.  I think we shy away from the hard work, frustrations and the very results we fear as likely to be ill-mannered.





  n Wednesday, May 6, 2015 at 4:17:23 PM UTC+1, frantheman wrote:

No question, Neil, Graeber is compelling. If basic university economics courses made his Debt and Piketty's Capital required reading, then perhaps it could be the beginning of change in that area (I'm not holding my breath).

Still, as you point out, anarchist anthropology is seriously – maybe even hopelessly – idealistic. The great weakness of anarchism as a theory is its difficulty in accepting that power structures are a hardwired part of any societal organisation, going beyond the human into the social structures of every social animal (primates, wolves, cats, meerkats). If you really want to change anything you're going to need organisation and continuity and such considerations lead one to the realisation that power is a ubiquitous reality and that all you can do is try to develop structures which, at their best, serve to limit and control its abuse. That's why (I believe) Chomsky – another anarchist – keeps harping on about accountability as the only mechanism with any hope of bringing about change.

I certainly don't regard hunter-gatherers as noble savages; power abuse can and does take place in small groups too. Maybe it just has to do with size and personal relationships; in the small group the dominating bully can still be brought to heel by his granny, of whom he is still afraid.

As I've commented before, I grow ever more pessimistic about the possibilities of real change. It's not that there aren't enough good ideas out there about better ways of doing things. The problem is how to get from a to b. You either go the long, hard way of organised politics, making a thousand compromises in order to achieve something until you've finally diluted your initial goals so much that you finish up a signed-up member of the mainstream. Or you take the revolutionary road, one that generally finishes up with terror, committees of public safety, and the total cannibalisation of its children.

Watching the desperate attempts of the Greek Syriza government to try to achieve some degree of sanity in its negotiations with the European and global financial establishment just shows how difficult any attempt to minimally move outside bwanker orthodoxy is.Molly's suggestions about local concentrated action are certainly good, but without well thought-out and supported structures it's difficult to sustain momentum and consolidate progress.

Am Mittwoch, 6. Mai 2015 14:24:06 UTC+2 schrieb archytas:
I've gone off Jared Diamond (prose style was never easy) in favour of more anarchist anthropology (David Graeber) - though I can't more than quibble what Jared says overall and complain he takes too long doing it.  There's some relevant dispute over the idea of 'fierce people' rather than noble savages.  Anarchy (as leaderlessness) is a myth with our biology - but I digress.  Graeber makes the point somewhere that he always finds that language cannot be understood without an understanding of loads of day-to-day action.  This is also true of our words like consensus, which may be achieved by various forms of violence in practice.

I fear it's worse (even) than Francis describes.  Our ability to tell each other what we need to know seems to have gone backwards with 'social media' and we seem to have broken into the 'knowledge gossiped at the back of the class' with no real public argument.  Don has said a couple of times recently that it's a good idea to be humble with cops if you do something wrong.  I found black and Asian people in trouble much more hostile on average than whites and there is some evidence to suggest all cops react rather quicker and tougher because of this.  US policing is out of control, military and very rough compared with most in the UK.  UK cops have been very, very poor for a long time when dealing with so-called minor crime, particularly amongst poor neighbourhoods.  And I have to say cops lie nearly all the time, even if this is aimed in noble cause.  This won't help.  Plus the court systems are upper-crust and stuff like forensics in a dire state of bias.  There are no bankers inside and the rich generally don't  go to jail.  I'm not sure what will pop, but surely we can all hear the pot boiling up!   

On Wednesday, May 6, 2015 at 12:18:49 PM UTC+1, frantheman wrote:

If a society is broken, you won't be able to fix it with policing. Neil pointed out that the "police" and "polite" have a common linguistic/cultural root: the Greek word polis. "Politics", of course, has the same root. All of these concepts go back to the basic meaning of polis, "town" or "city", that location where people come together in societies larger than the original hunter-gatherer groups where questions of power and conflicts of interest could be regulated in easy, informal ways, usually resulting in decisions which were accepted and supported by some kind of consensus. It's worth remembering that this was the universal form of societal organisation for humans for around 98% of our existence.

It was only around 10,000 years ago, with the discovery of agriculture, that humans started living in larger organisations. The spread of agriculture, cities, and the differentiation of functions and competencies in larger societies was accompanied from the very beginning by a power grab by the strongest – no longer inhibited by the consensus mechanisms of the small family/clan group (maximum size around 150 members). If anyone wants to read up on this kind of stuff, the writings of people like Jared Diamond are one way into it.

Since then, humanity has largely been controlled by elites of one sort or another. In the better iterations, those with power have realised that life is actually better for them if they can win the support of a broad group within the polis, rather than retaining power through oppression. The best way to do this is with ideas/shared mythologies/common narratives, which gain legitimation as they become part of the self-identification consensus in the society. Examples would be the Roman concept of the res publica ["the common thing"], or the idea of the king as the divinely ordained guarantor of the security and the protector from oppression of the little man, or the Enlightenment/bourgeois idea of universal human rights.

The real motivation for the power elites in these cases is the realisation that they actually do better when the mass of society is basically contented, and has the feeling that they are secure and have the possibility of some kind of prosperity. Built-in mechanisms for upward mobility and participation also help. If you want to see it completely cynically, it's just a development of the "bread and circuses" concept.

Ideas, however, also bring problems, because their constituent memes have a tendency to take on a life of their own. In other words, they work because people accept them and believe in them, but then they can also become a threat to the elites, because the working-out of their consequences often threaten their hegemony. This dialectic is one way of looking at modern history from the 18th to the end of the 20th Century. The Enlightenment memes of rationality, human rights, democracy, etc. had immense power to motivate and activate people, who actually believed in them. "Power to the People", if really applied, means "power away from the elites".

There was a moment in the West, in the immediate aftermath of the horrors of WWII, where the Enlightenment/modern/liberal programme seemed to have won the day. It didn't last. Even in the late 50s, Eisenhower (a Republican!), in a prophetic insight into deeper practical reality, warned against the "military-industrial complex" and its ability to practically negate the whole civil-liberal programme. The struggle for the "soul" of society continued through the 60s and 70s before – as Alan points out – the rise of neo-liberalism as propagated by Reagan and Thatcher finally sounded the death-knell of the inclusivist participational Enlightenment modernist project. The really insidious part of this was that the liberal "form" was left in place while the content was completely subverted.

There was a realisation among the elites that Lincoln was wrong, you don't have to fool all the people all the time, you just have to fool enough of them enough of the time. It doesn't matter if the hopeless underclass is growing, if more and more children are left behind, as long as you can continually manipulate the balance of power in your favour. Keep the bread and circuses going, keep enough of the people "believing the dream" (while at the same time controlling practical access to its actual realisation) so that discontent is kept below a potentially dangerous threat level. Even modern, sophisticated, information societies need an underclass to flip burgers, clean offices, mow lawns, and deliver packages of stuff ordered online – hewers of wood and drawers of water. In the US they're mostly black and Hispanic, in Europe they're immigrants from Eastern Europe, former colonies, and all those in Africa and the Middle East who are prepared to take the chance of drowning in the Mediterranean just to get away from the nightmare of their failed countries of origin (in which failure the West itself is deeply complicit). Then you tweak the situation even more to your advantage by persuading that proportion of your indigenous society which is rapidly falling down the social ladder (people who might have had a proud working-class identity fifty years ago but are now increasingly becoming just "poor white trash") that the immigrants are the ones to blame for their misery. The result is Tea Party, Front National, UKIP, Jobbik, etc. The long con, the big lie, getting turkeys voting for Thanksgiving.

Getting back to the point, before this background policing is no longer an expression of the self-regulation necessary in an empowered, functioning society; instead it's more and more an instrument of oppression, a necessary instrument of social control, the defence of the status quo. The Rent-a-mob phenomenon (with strong criminal tendencies) Molly refers to is just another consequence of deep dysfunction in our civil societies.

It seems to be the consensus among the elites that this situation is – from their point of view – controllable, stable. I don't really believe that this is a conscious conspiratorial consensus, most of it is ad hoc, a confidence that they can go on riding the tiger indefinitely. Most of the educated, working middle-class (and that includes everyone here on ME) is lulled into complacence, or moved to supporting the status quo by fear of the increasing alienation of the alien underclass in the 'hoods, banlieues, or camps for refugees/asylum seekers.

I'm afraid we're all playing with fire. I think of 1788 in Paris, or 1916 in Russia. Policing as control rather than regulation is trying to increase the weight on the lid of a boiling pot rather than turning down the heat. The longer this goes on, the bigger the bang when the mechanisms finally fail.

 


Am Montag, 4. Mai 2015 12:59:15 UTC+2 schrieb Molly:
The big ongoing news here in the states is the rash of clash between demonstrators and police. The demonstrations are (supposedly) brought on by the ever growing voice against the use of excessive force by police. It is such a complex issue, and the demonstrations themselves are not a simple problem.

Since living in Detroit I've heard many storied about how the riots of 1967 altered the course of history for the city, and changed individual lives forever. Most recently, I cried like a baby listening to the eulogy of a fine man given my his loving wife, my friend. He was a catholic priest at the time, and she a Detroit resident. He left the priesthood afterward and they married a couple of years later. There were over 40 priests at the services, three from Rome officiated the funeral mass. This guy was on the fast track to Cardinal when the riots shook his very core and changed his value system forever.

It gets me thinking about the very nature of the waves of demonstrations. In the sixties, of course, they were spurred by civil rights issues, Then the war in Vietnam (four dead in Ohio). Now it seems, in the age of transparency, the relationship between law enforcement and the criminals they deter (treatment during the time of arrest.) Complicated and exacerbated by the new "protest for hire" gang, the same well funded group that travels the US heightening racial tension (Al Sharpton, Jessie Jackson.) Baltimore's riots had a big gang problem that hasn't been seen yet, the street gangs hoping on board in an organized way to conduct criminal activity in the chaos. Something's gotta give.

Certainly, the police methods employed in some metropolitan cities should be eliminated and cleaned up. But the police have to be able to defend themselves and do their job (which should be protecting and serving the public.) Where any of that goes off the rail is where it gets murky.

When we can't have civil unrest without it being corrupted by monied interests looking to make things worse, there is little hope for societal change. This may be the reason for the current chaos. Follow the money.

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