Monday, November 07, 2022
The Problem of the R-Whites
Monday, June 20, 2022
War is the Drift of the State
Yesterday, the analyst of land warfare Jack Watling described the extent to which Ukraine has been trapped into attritional warfare. Towards the end he writes, “The final process of attrition for Ukraine is economic, and in this realm there can be no doubt that it is running out of money, while Russia can withstand western sanctions. Soon it will be essential for economic relief to sustain the government in Kyiv. Alongside the military considerations outlined above, therefore, ending the attritional struggle in Ukraine is ultimately a question of how much Nato members are prepared to invest in Russia’s defeat.”
The answer about NATO investment is “as little as possible.” “Fighting to the last Ukranian” remains the strategy. Reversion to the mean is the default answer, meaning back to the cold war, famine, and global poverty.
The visits of EU leaders--and the invitations to Ukraine to apply for membership--make it impossible for Putin to back down.
The UK's Boris Johnson didn't want to be left out. Same message.
The Westerners insure a Cold War standoff slated to go on for years.
The war comes as a forty-year free-money period comes unglued. Day after day, the Financial Times headlines deepening business alarm. Will Hutton summarized the dying paradigm in the first paragraph of his Observer column, which appeared on the same day as Watling’s.
This is not the 1970s all over again, notwithstanding the apparent similarities – oil shocks, recession, seasons of discontent, inflation. What we are living through is something more profound. It is the painful unwinding of the dysfunctional Thatcherite economic model, driven by credit, consumption and property prices, so careless of investment, productivity and good, high-performance workplaces. Its end started with the financial crisis, accelerated with Brexit and is now sealed by the economic fallout from Ukraine.
He goes on to point out that this government has no economic plan, and also, that such a plan is beyond the capabilities of this government.
I said to Andrea yesterday in Crux Easton that the Tories have spent 12 years making the majority of their people poorer.
“That’s always been the Tory strategy.”
“Going back to the 19th century?”
“Before that.”
“Since the Civil War in the 17th?”
“Yes, exactly since the Civil War. Since the Roundheads rose up, the poverty of the people has been the Tory strategy.”
More people now say this about the Tories--that their goal is the poverty of the British people. The other
consensus is that Labour has no alternative. Party leader Starmer couldn't see Zelenskyy, so had a photo op with British NATO troops talking about Labour's restored patriotism. Kier and Boris are in full agreement.
The policy in the “West” is drift, and drift is the foundation of war.
Anything better will depend on mass mobilization, aiming at a positive alternative system. Hutton again:
But just as Thatcherism emerged out of the 1970s, a new philosophy right for our times must emerge now. Its building blocks are still hazy but already apparent. The trillions of ESG (environmental, social and governance) savings need to be mobilised in partnership with government to pursue great national missions – levelling up, rebasing our energy system and grid to achieve net zero, opening up space, transforming our cities, building in new resiliencies, backing our science.
Yes. And this will only happen if policy agency shifts from the current leadership pretty much everywhere to regular people, who've set themselves up in organizations now largely invisible. This is kind of great.
"This is a different brand of activist — young, mostly female and mostly from Eastern Europe — who believes that the Ukraine war is a brutal manifestation of the world’s dependence on fossil fuels. They have joined two causes — antiwar activism and climate change — to take full advantage of this moment when the world’s attention is focused on Ukraine. And to make their case, they confront Europe’s leaders face-to-face."
They are great, and this needs to spread. It seems small, but only direct action is going to derail what's happening now.
Tuesday, June 14, 2022
Denying Reality
I'd just gotten back to London in June 2017 when Grenfell Tower caught fire and burned all night, killing 72 of its residents. On June 17th, four days later, we visited a friend who lives nearby and spent time at the already very large memorial (hence the photo).
In a few weeks, we knew the causes more or less: the council had bought flammable cladding because it was cheaper, and turned the building into a torch waiting for a match; they followed no fire protocols, another likely cost saving; responsibility had been deregulated and outsourced; repeated resident complaints and warnings had been deliberately ignored. The white council government of the richest borough in Britain continuously ignored a tower of people of color in its midst by cloaking it in magic incinerator metal. It was an obvious case of malpractice issuing from structural racism that the government was rendering an unspeakable fact years before it seized on the menace of critical race theory.
Today is the 5th anniversary of the fire. There have been no official findings of cause, no convictions, or even indictments. What has emerged, as the Financial Times piece put it, is "a disregard for safety within parts of the construction industry and a compromised regulatory regime that allowed Britain to become a dumping ground for dangerous goods."
I'd been following the decline of British higher ed since the fee tripling and central funding cuts implemented by the Cameron-Willetts regime in 2011. But Grenfell was the moment when I decided Britain's decline would be obvious to everyone, and that something would happen. I didn't think of it as a point of no return. Now I do.
The Johnson government isn't failing on a few issues where its defunct Thatcherism or right-wing backbenchers are holding it back. It is failing on every front.
Just on Saturday:
- Farming: the government is not replacing EU subsidies lost to Brexit, and has cut them 20% this year.
- Food policy: the government is diluting the Dimbleby Report, authored by the Tory co-founder of the Leon restaurant chain, rejecting "expanded sugar and salt taxes" to fund fruit and vegetable consumption by low-income families. The obesity crisis will continue and probably worsen.
- Immigration: a high court judge ruled the plan to deport migrants to Rwanda to be legal. This plan is an obvious self-inflicted humiliation to Britain's international reputation, such as it still is, combining casual cruelty, neocolonial dumping in Africa, bumptious illegality, and financial incoherence, all wrapped in Monty-Python absurdist packaging. Even the crown, in the person of Prince Charles, has been unable to suppress its disgust. And yet first flight is to leave today, with 8 migrants.
- Northern Ireland: the government is nullifying large parts of its own treaty with the EU to extend its denial of the reality that it put a custom barrier between Great Britain and the island of Ireland.
- Education: more strong applicants are being excluded from their first choices of university, even as marketization has degraded the distinctive alternative universities like Birkbeck, Goldsmiths, and SOAS.
- Research funding: UK universities have all but given up on managing to stay in the 95 billion euro EU framework program that they wanted to keep in spite of Brexit.
- Economics; the government has no actual plan either to "level up" the North or to expand the economy or to create high-wage, high-skill jobs. It is responding to warnings of widespread food and fuel poverty by promising tax cuts.
Intelligence requires foresight, which means seeing the bad effects of what you are about to do before you do it, and not years later, when it's way too late. But the failure of Brexit, the lethal Covid response, the attacks on cultural institutions, migrants seeking refugee status, universities, Black dissent--all the old unforgotten enemies going back to empire--has only hardened the government persisting in the obviously stupid on the basis of dim political calculations that their own people don't credit. And the hard-core TOry reprobates drive the discourse, which is familar from the U.S., which also has oriented its entire political system around the coddling of its most backward elements.
The actual British people aren't like this. The gap between governments and people is rightly described as wide. And yet these people as voters did put this government in and show no sign of mass repentance and change.
Meanwhile they may turn the burned tower into a 24 story garden. We do remember the dead and the creativity of the local responses to the living. I dearly hope the latter can spread.
Sunday, May 01, 2022
War Diary 7: Checkmate
That same day, March 26th, Biden ended his speech in Warsaw with the famous ad lib, “for God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power.”
One month after that, during an originally-secret visit to Ukraine by the US Secretaries of State and Defense, Anthony Blinken and Lloyd Austin, Austin said, ““We want to see Russia weakened to the degree that it can’t do the kinds of things that it has done in invading Ukraine. It had already lost a lot of military capability and a lot of its troops, quite frankly, and we want to see them not have the capability to very quickly reproduce that capability.”
The top officials in the U.S. government have directly jeopardized the existence of the Putin government of Russia, which is the same as the existence of their Russia. I can’t tell if they’re keeping Russia’s nuclear option alive through intent--which can't be ruled out--or blundering stupidity. But the result is the same: Putin and his government thinking the West’s response to the Ukraine invasion is an existential threat to them. The U.S. response to that has been further displays of contempt.
It’s contempt without a plan for de-escalation. On his April 28th episode of Background Briefing, Ian Masters spoke with a frequent guest, Robert Baer, the former CIA agent and author who’s best known for the material that led to the film Syriana, about brutal US policy in the Middle East. Around 15’45”, an alarmed Masters starts to push Baer to produce a concrete answer about how Putin can stop from escalating in Ukraine and beyond it.
Masters: But his army’s a paper tiger. You were saying that earlier. So how the hell is he going beyond where he is right now?
Baer: He simply has to produce artillery shells. And run them through his artillery pieces. Until Ukraine simply no longer exists. And as of today that’s where he’s going.
Masters: And what can Biden do? Biden today announced a 33-billion-dollar package. They’ve been very slow getting stuff to the Ukrainian military, but what’s the 33 billion dollars going to do if this is the ultimate plan? Is there any way to stop Putin?
Baer: The 33 billion dollars is a down payment on World War III.
Masters: meaning what?
Baer: Meaning an attack on a NATO country. The Baltics. Go in, take them. He’s got to continue this war on the West and War on NATO. He cannot let it go at this- a piece of the Donbas. There’s so much he’s lost, he’s got to keep going. …. He can’t turn to the Russians and say hey, it was a mistake, we got a bigger piece of the Donbas, let’s declare victory and leave. People have been watching him for years—that’s not what he’s going to do. …We don’t really know what he’s going to do. He’s been listening to these mystics, you know, Russian superiority and the Russian soul and it’s the clash of civilisations. He believes this. We don’t know what he’s going to do.
Masters: Let’s just go back to the idea that he fires a nuke at Odessa. That’s a huge game-changer. What’s the West going to do then?
Baer: I have no idea. And I don’t think anyone in Washington does. They don’t know what’s going on. They never took him seriously. When he went into Crimea in 2014 and all this blabbering on about how he’s going to take on NATO and take on the West—nobody believed it. And now all of the sudden you have to figure out what this guy’s going to do next. You can’t tell from pictures, but I’m beginning to wonder whether he’s completely lost his mind. And that means you can’t predict what he’s going to do. You can’t predict whether the Russian command and control will follow orders to launch nukes. That’s unknowable. We don’t know.
Masters: Assuming he does fire a tactical nuclear weapon as a way to break the will of the Ukrainians and destroy Odessa—as much as there are international sanctions now, he’d become an international pariah, nobody would want to deal with him, not even the Chinese, would they?
Baer: Ian, right now it’s the Sampson option for him. He has to die and take down the temple.
Masters: right but is there any way that you can let him have some kind of victory that he can dress up as a victory?
Baer: there’s nobody to give him that victory. I Zelensky turns to the Ukrainian military and says, “hey, we’re going to give up the Donbas to stop this,” Zelensky will be gone the same day.
Masters: so both sides are fighting to the death.
Bear: Yep. …they’re determined. They’re going for broke.
Masters: well they have every reason. They’re being invaded, right?
Baer: yep, they’re being murdered. It’s genocide. What do you do when you’re up against genocide? You fight back. And surrender does nothing for you, because they’ll keep going. All these things, it doesn’t really matter what the plans are. It’s what people believe.
Masters: well you’ve given us a lot to think about, Bob Baer, and I thank you very much for joining us here today.
Baer: yeah, well none of it is optimistic.
Masters: that’s an understatement. 20’15”
Two big things are happening here. The first is that a tactical nuclear strike is being discussed as a realistic possibility.
Second, Baer dismisses the two current standard "solutions." Arms flows to Ukraine won't stop the destruction of Ukraine. And the other, a diplomatic solution, is no longer possibly psychologically.
We can state the diplomatic solution's starting points: Russia keeps Crimea, Ukraine keeps the Donbas with formal rights for ethnic Russians there, Ukraine pledges neutrality and permanent withdrawal of any bid to join NATO. Something like this was proposed yet again on the same day as the Masters-Baer exchange by the Quincy Institute's Anatol Lieven. But, as Baer would expect, this framework didn't survive even to the end of the show: Lieven later said that Russia needs all of the Donbas to justify its losses, but left out the next sentence as provided by Baer—that the Ukranian military, their country invaded and half destroyed, their existence denied by Putin, will fight to the death to prevent this.
Lievan also said,
Lloyd Austin’s comments, and those of the British government, as well, imply a war that will go on essentially forever, you know, an endless war against Russia. You know, we have to ask what that will do to Ukraine, what it will do to the world economy, and what it will do to Europe.
We actually don't need to ask because we already know: if the war isn't forever, it's nuclear.
Checkmate. See this war for what it is, in order to think past it.
Thursday, January 20, 2022
The Sum of All Toryism
An obvious example is the National Health Service, which has repeatedly been on the verge of meltdown since I started paying careful attention in 2013. Covid made that worse, but even before the Tory strategy was to keep core institutions at the level of "barely good enough to get by." The NHS is uber-popular here because it represents equal access, that is service not (for once) graded by wealth and privilege. Naturally the Tories have been bleeding that example.
The Tories have made mediocrity the de facto standard of public systems, with actual collapse a perpetual shadow. UK infrastructures are not competitive in the 21st century. The Tory UK is weaker in 2022 than it was in 2010 when they took over. Neither the media nor much of the voting public ever focus on these core issues. They are less important than another issue, which we'll get to.
Another example of "making worse" is the government itself. Starting in 2015-16, Johnson and his Tories have turned public discussion in the country upside down. Everything has been about Brexit, everything has been about the people leading it--Johnson, May, Gove, Davies, Frost, et al. generating now seven years of nonsense about everything. Real British issues like climate disaster, entrenched poverty, deindustrialization, poor national health, faltering education, the worst productivity gains in the rich world, political corruption--all these were drowned by the nonstop Brexit roadshow.
Brexit got fired up five years into the Coalition and then Conservative austerity reign, which was clearly going nowhere. Over the decade, the BBC, the country's only internationally-respected institution (hate to break the news) was cut 30 percent, and councils, which sustain local quality of life, were generally cut around 50 percent. This forced cuts that hurt essential services (after school youth programs, sidewalk de-icing, rubbish collection, everything), making most of this stuff, even in my well-off borough of Islington, pretty crappy. Simple repairs (a hole in a sideboard allowing squirrels into the building walls) would take months and months, and then not be done well enough to last more than a few weeks. Councils also ramped up side businesses like moneylending and accompanying risks. The fatal decision to put flammable cladding on Grenfell Tower was stupid and insane on its face, but very much a part of this austerity-mediocrity ethos that has degraded Britain.
Actually there is another internationally-respected British institution, universities, and the Tory-led Coalition government entered by whacking them too, cutting central teaching funding to near zero for most fields, then later cutting maintenance grants for students, then still later eliminating the London cost allowance, all after tripling the fee level and creating a student debt (and also public debt, don't ask) crisis and then freezing fees for years which has pushed many universities into fiscal crisis--you get the picture. The entitled, casual fucking around with really complex institutions that took decades and the life-work of millions, well, it is very very hard to understand.
Behind the "great trading nation" rhetoric, the implicit Tory plan is to make everyday life for most people a little bit worse, year after year. The Tory offer to builders, bankers, and property owners is clear. But they offer nothing material to the general population: they certainly have no plan for economic grandeur of the kind associated with the lost empire, because--short of re-colonial conquest-- that would require massive investments in public and behaviorially-evolved stuff--research, advanced education, sustained managerial effort that goes beyond coercion and bullying, and also long-range, sustained thinking.
When they get into trouble, as they have now, Tories first think to wreck some more. Hence their absurd culture minister's plan to freeze and then defund the BBC, the home office minister's plan to sic the Navy on refugee rafts, the likely pushing of more patients into the NHS by lifting all Covid restrictions before Omicron has been contained, and so on. There's just nothing constructive coming out of the party post-Brexit, which was the pointless, damaging culmination of their first 10 years of post-Thatcherite rule.
So the question is why do these Tories rule? One answer is that the Labour party today offers nothing much either. It presided over many Tory cuts on local councils in the famous red wall regions, and its post-Corbyn alternative is basically nonexistent. What rebuilding would Labour actually do? Their shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, used a Financial Times interview to promise fiscal discipline, Tory style.
A better answer comes from Nesrine Malik this week in the Guardian--it's kind of the only thing you need to read on the subject (though see also Aditya Chakraborty). Malik rightly claims that Tory supporters aren't going to dump Johnson so easily (though they will happily beat him up enough to make him more compliant with Thatcherite conservatism).
Johnson is a contracted private service provider – as long as he delivers, then as clients, his supporters don’t really care what he gets up to outside of the tasks he has been hired for. Those tasks are broadly Brexit and a shiny, prosperous country where jobs and funds have been cut or confiscated from those less deserving.
She then helpfully translates:
Those two tasks, at heart, are about contempt for communal rule of law, and limiting sharing resources with others. They are about making our own minds up regarding which laws we would like thank you very much, and creating two classes of people. ... It is no wonder Tory supporters are not storming the gates of Downing Street.
So the Tory offer to the nation is English exceptionalism. This has two components, one financial and one cultural, read racial.
The sub-clauses in the contract that flow from these two headline items all, one way or another, are about preserving the financial and cultural assets of Conservative voters. Maintaining an economy built on protecting private capital and property values, shifting the blame for low wages and unemployment on to immigrants rather than poor regulation of employers, and forging a synthetic supremacist national identity through relentless culture war posturing on colonial history, statues, flags and national anthems.
Basically Malik has captured the whole story of English Conservatism today. There is nothing else to say. "As long as the Tories hurt only who they 'need to be hurting,' no frivolity or recklessness will be terminal." They have no other goals, or other ideas.
There. UK politics is explained. And, if Tory superdominance stays intact, so is the inevitability of English decline.