Written by
Jim Scott
Absolutely
every single aspect of our lives’ is political; from the big issues like
Climate Breakdown, Hospitals and Food-banks to the precious metals in our smart
phones, the chemicals in our toothpaste and the socks on our feet. The second
we wake up each day to the moment we go to sleep, everything is political, even
while or where we sleep!
We often hear
people make comments like; “Oh, I’m not political” or; “I can’t stand politics
& politicians”. While it is perfectly understandable that many people feel
contempt or apathy towards an arguably corrupt and detached political class,
are we not negating our own responsibilities to creating the kind of world we
want to see by taking this disconnected & non-committal approach?
David
Attenborough gave a very powerful speech to the COP24 conference recently,
highlighting climate breakdown and the mass extinctions that we face on global
scale if the ‘decision makers’ do not act immediately to reverse global
emissions. For once, the BBC ran this topic as a headline story and ran it for
an entire day. Yet, with their backdrop of the Polish coal mining industry, the
media coverage was ‘in hock’ to say the least to the fossil fuel industry by
the very way in which they framed the story.
I don’t doubt
Attenborough’s commitment to this issue for one minute but he is not coming at
this from a ‘political’ or ‘politically aware’ standpoint, if he was then he
would have known exactly how to respond when the BBC tried to torpedo his
arguments by asking him what his solutions were for the Polish Coal miners
& their families and the effect that losing the Polish coal industry would
have on their livelihoods. His answer was along the lines of; “things change”,
“workers will have to adapt”, yet if he was politically aware he would have
known all the arguments straight ‘off the bat’ and could have reeled off all
the positive alternatives to coal.
He could have
talked about Green jobs, disruptive technologies, disinvestment, and the HUGE
opportunities the Green economy will offer Coal miners, in terms of high
skilled, well paid & secure jobs. Everything is political, impending
Climate breakdown is the most pressing political issue of our time, it is
simply ludicrous to not recognise that and not to campaign directly on those terms.
A similar
example can be seen with the many Tory MP’s now ‘gas-lighting’ at Foodbanks all
over Britain, posing for publicity photos at the very foodbanks their own
policies have created the need for, this isn’t new either. I wrote this letter back in 2014 to our local papers when our Tory MP, Stephen Crabb shamelessly
posed for photos at our local foodbank just three days before he voted in
Westminster; ‘Against the publication of an investigation into food bank use
& UK hunger, and against the motion which called on the government to
implement measures to reduce dependency on food banks.’
Crabb has
also consistently voted for cuts to welfare spending, benefits and to reduce
support for disabled people despite knowing exactly the effects these cuts are
having. Allowing these carpet-bagging Tory MP’s to steal publicity at the very
foodbanks they have created isn’t just ‘a little bit unseemly’ it’s outright
immoral, it’s completely disgusting on every level!
Yet Foodbank charities allow this Tory gas-lighting because they have to stay ‘politically neutral’ and need the publicity themselves, the whole thing is like some kind of monstrous, dystopian farce! It would actually be funny if it wasn’t so obscene! The publicity and votes that these MP’s gain from being seen as ‘caring individuals’ or as philanthropists is nothing but ‘political’ to them!
Yet Foodbank charities allow this Tory gas-lighting because they have to stay ‘politically neutral’ and need the publicity themselves, the whole thing is like some kind of monstrous, dystopian farce! It would actually be funny if it wasn’t so obscene! The publicity and votes that these MP’s gain from being seen as ‘caring individuals’ or as philanthropists is nothing but ‘political’ to them!
Stephen Crabb
even attended our local foodbank’s AGM this year! Yet a local Labour member who
collects for the foodbank and who’d brought toys for the Christmas toy appeal
in a bag with the Labour logo on it was told to; “put it in another bag” for
fear of it looking like ‘political’ opportunism. No doubt Crabb got some nice
photos for his Facebook page and the local papers though!
Our local
Hospital, Withybush Hospital in Pembrokeshire, is under threat of closure, the
official campaign team says that our campaign has to remain completely
‘non-political’, yet surely it couldn’t get any more political! After 40 years
of neoliberalism, what the campaign is failing to recognise is that it’s right
a wing ideology itself that we are fighting here. Yes, the hospital was already
under threat while under Labour control from both Westminster and the Welsh
Assembly governments’, but eight years of politically motivated Tory austerity
now signals the death knell for our hospital.
The founding
principles of the NHS have been laid waste to by 40 years of successive right
wing governments’, it’s the political ideology that we need to be fighting
here. So this means fighting the neoliberal consensus, whether we hear it from
the Clinical Directors, the Health Board, the (slowly moving back to the left)
Welsh Labour Government, the Tories or their cohorts inside the British media
establishment. Our hospital will close due to the cumulative, political shift
to the right which we have witnessed over the last 40 years by our Governments,
our media and our national consciousness.
It really
couldn’t be any more political. The fight to save our hospital will never be
won until the campaign itself, both identifies and targets the neoliberal
ideologies that are driving the closures in the first place.
So it’s all
very well for people to say; “I’m not political”, or them saying; “I’m an
anarchist, f**k politics etc..”. I also personally hold strong anarchist
principles too and would embrace the chance to be off in the hills right now
growing food instead of fighting politically driven injustices. Indeed, it’s
often quoted that; “growing your own food is one of the greatest forms of
resistance”. I agree with that sentiment wholeheartedly, however, that in
itself is a massively political choice to make and we all need to start making
these choices at every level of our lives but we need to recognise what these
choices mean & why we’re making them.
If we are apathetic
and take no part in the political agendas which influence every aspect of our
surroundings, then we ignore the for instance, that the metals and minerals
found in our Smart phones have largely been torn from the ground in north
Africa. Where corporations with scant regard for environmental protections or
their employee’s safety, exploit the workers who they force into terrible
working conditions and where they fund and arm militias armies to murder &
put-down any uprisings that emerge from the indigenous people.
To ignore
politics, is to ignore the chemicals that ‘are’ or ‘are not’ allowed in our
toothpaste and in our food, it is to ignore the child worker who worked in the
factory that made our socks and clothes. We will face catastrophic climate breakdown
if we fail to halt the fossil fuel industry in its tracks, and to stop the one
hundred companies who are responsible for 71% of global emissions in the next
5-12 years.
These are
giant, powerful, dirty, irresponsible & exploitative companies and the only
way we can stop them is via political means. Governments around the world
including our own are locked in to a toxic three-way embrace with the
corporations and liberal capitalism itself, they prop each other up and sustain
each other’s agendas’.
The arms
industry and constant exploitative wars, are all facilitated by this toxic
interdependency. If we fail to recognise it for what it is how can we ever stop
it? There is not one item in our homes’ that doesn’t carry a political
footprint or hold political meaning, not one aspect of our lives’ that is not
tainted one way or the other by the political agendas’ of others or by past
political choices. The sugar and fat levels in our food, the amount of money in
our pay packet, the number of hours we work each week –all political.
The better we
begin to understand how all the pieces of this vast political jigsaw fit
together the better equipped we are as a global race to begin to create our own
pieces of the jigsaw in order to build the type of world that we all want to
see, namely; a world that won’t be destroyed by the inherent & hardwired
greed of capitalism but we need to analyse everything in the world around us
and every aspect of our lives in order to do that.
Jim Scott is a rural activist,
Eco-Socialist campaigner and writer, a member of Pembrokeshire Green Party and
a Green Left supporter
"After 40 years of neoliberalism, what the campaign is failing to recognise is that it’s right a wing ideology itself that we are fighting here." - I whole heartedly agree with the overall point you're making here, Jim. As you say, fighting a hospital closure, for example, has to be put into the frame-of-reference of the preceding 40 years of neoliberal hegemony. The question for me is what kind of green-left consensus we can start to build. We need, for example, to square the circle between an anti-austerity stance (which would encourage reflating the economy, thus creating jobs and wealth) with commitments to environmental sustainability and undermining the power of private capital. There are many interesting perspectives out there (such as Modern Monetary Theory, market socialism, wage-earner funds, green new deal) but perhaps we on the green-left are ideologically conflicted? Do we believe in: reflation? nationalisation? citizens' income? a role for the market? negative growth? "sustainable development"? These are the kinds of discussions that are necessary, in my view, as foundations for an effective counter-hegemonic project. Laurence
ReplyDeleteAgreed, but we need to concentrate on shared ideology and not let any differences delay improvement. Marxists argue with Trotskyists in the gutter while the Tories laugh in their palaces.
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