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the real class war .....from John Passant …. The collapse in profit rates in much of the developed world in the late 1960s and early 1970s saw the ruling class abandon Keynesianism and embrace what we now call neoliberalism. This ideology is about addressing falling profit rates by cutting wages, public services, and imposing the market on public goods and services. Elizabeth Martinez and Arnoldo Garcia identify five main elements of economic neoliberalism – the rule of the market, cutting public expenditure for social services, deregulation, privatisation and eliminating the concept of public good or community and replacing it with individual responsibility. For me the essence of neoliberalism is captured by Eddie Cimorelli when he says: Neoliberalism is a particular organisation of capitalism. Its most basic feature is the use of the state to protect capital, impose market imperatives on society and curb the power of labour. The political response to the fall in profit rates took a few years to work its way through the democratic systems. It wasn’t until 1979 that Margaret Thatcher came to power in Britain and Ronald Reagan in 1981 in the US. The precursor to this democratic embrace of anti-working class policies was the Pinochet dictatorship in Chile where from September 11 1973 onwards the armed thugs could transform the Chilean economy on the bones of the Chilean working class. In power, it took five years before Thatcher felt confident enough to launch a full frontal attack on the working class. After more than a year of brutalising striking miners and their communities she and her class emerged victorious in 1985. The Australian ruling class took a different route. The shadow boxing between the working class and ruling class under the Fraser government produced no decisive victory for the one per cent in addressing falling profit rates. Instead of confrontation the ruling class in Australia opted for cooption. The election of the Hawke Labor government signalled the beginning of neoliberal reforms in Australia with the working class as partner, not opponent. The trade union bureaucracy, some of whom even believed the rhetoric of the Accord, embraced class collaboration as the new El Dorado. In one sense that was right – for the bosses. As class struggle collapsed, the Hawke and Keating governments were able to set in place policies that transferred wealth from labour to capital. In doing this they were more successful that the confrontational approach of the Thatcher government. When there was confrontation, as in the pilots’ strike in 1988 and its direct challenge to the wage cutting Accord, the Hawke Labor government was able to mobilise not just the armed forces, in particular the air force, but also the mainstream of the trade union bureaucracy against the pilots and defeat them. It did the same when earlier, in 1985, it de-registered the militant Builders Labourers Federation in New South Wales and Victoria. The rest of the union leadership sat on their hands or began to position themselves for taking over the BLF members. In supporting these attacks the union bureaucrats defeated themselves. Today as one consequence of the class collaboration of the Accord and all that has been built on its back – enterprise bargaining, WorkChoices, and now Gillard’s WorkChoices Lite- the union movement has lost massive working class support. Less than 20 per cent of the workforce are now union members, compared to more than 50 per cent in the 1970s. In overseeing a big shift in wealth to capital and weakening the trade union movement, Hawke and Keating laid the groundwork for the election of the Howard Liberal government. That government by and large continued the previous Labor governments’ neoliberal policies and felt emboldened at times to attack workers either specifically, for example on the waterfront, or more generally with the hated WorkChoices. The continuity of neoliberalism from Hawke and Keating to Howard was carried on with the election of the Rudd Labor government in 2007 and the minority Gillard Labor government in 2010. Although Rudd was elected on the back of a largely passive union campaign against WorkChoices, tapping into working class anger but giving it a respectable ‘vote for us’ outlet rather than class struggle, the Rudd and Gillard governments’ industrial relations laws – Fair Work – can best be described as WorkChoices Lite. The laws keep much of the previous WorkChoices provisions with only some of the more egregious provisions removed. So although Thatcher and Gillard have or had seemingly very different approaches to industrial relations, their goal is the same – to shift wealth from labour to capital to address falling profit rates. They use different strategies on occasion to get there. Thatcher tried to manhandle unions into a strait jacket. Labor in Australia asks workers nicely to try it on and compliments us on the fit. It is not just in controlling the working class that there are similarities between Thatcher and Gillard. Both are warmongers, giving the lie to the crass section of feminist ‘analysis’ which paints women as carers. Thatcher for example ordered the sinking of the Belgrano as it was sailing away from the Falklands’ war zone and killed hundreds of mainly Argentinean cadets. She supported to the hilt the murderous Pinochet regime in Chile and South African apartheid. Gillard has kept Australian troops in Afghanistan and they and the rest of the allied forces have killed thousands of women and children. Gillard is one of the strongest supporters of Israeli apartheid. She locks up women and children in refugee concentration camps. The current hunger strike of asylum seekers against their unlawful detention for seeking freedom and justice evokes memories of the Irish martyrs like Bobby Sands who died at Thatcher’s hands in British prisons fighting for their freedom and justice. Thatcher devastated whole communities with her attacks on unions, especially the miners, her privatisations program and her cuts to public services. Right now as I write Gillard is overseeing a market system which is destroying hundreds of jobs at the Shell oil refinery in Geelong and Holden car plants in South Australia and Victoria. The result will be devastation for the workers and their families and Gillard does nothing to defend them. Labor’s neo-Thatcherism is paving the way for an Abbott government, a government which may, given the weakened state of unions in Australia generally, begin a direct attack on unions soon after it comes to power. The surrender experts from the Australian Council of Trade Unions are likely to continue their traditions of class collaboration and retreat at the first whiff of grapeshot from the bosses and Abbott. The way to fight the neoliberal Abbott is to fight the neoliberal Gillard.
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labour's ruin ....
Most people are already aware that there were many similarities between Tony Blair and Margaret Thatcher. Both were conviction politicians, both had political love-ins with US presidents and both liked to talk tough. Affable Tony could always ham it up with a good dose of media-friendly mock sincerity and tough talking. Thatcher and her PR people cynically forged the template for that. And both had a tendency to ignore that damned nuisance called public opinion and to land the country into a gruesome mess not of its own choosing.
Margaret Thatcher once famously stated that there is no such thing as society, implying that the individual is paramount and should not be held back by it - or at least by those sections of society for which she had a particular dislike. And, as a woman of conviction, there were plenty of those around. ‘Freedom of the individual’ was her mantra as she went on to grind organised labour into the ground, whom she labelled as “the enemy within,” to implement a range of policies in favour of the downtrodden rich and to put in place a variety policies to attack the ‘work-shy’ poor.
As a result, laudable principles pertaining to notions of equality, communality and justice have been frozen out by the excessive individuality and rampant debt-fuelled consumerism that we witness today.
Caught between old style principled union leaders, like Arthur Scargill of the National Union of Miners, and Thatcher’s self-righteous preaching, the class struggle was laid bare in 80s Britain. The unions lost and Thatcher presided over the virtual destruction of UK manufacturing industry and deliberately crushed any real opposition to her governments’ policies.
Many in Britain waited 18 years for a Labour government to come to power. However, by that time (1997) the party had reinvented itself as a Thatcher-hugging, right wing, media-friendly concern: a watered down version of the former Conservative regime with a middle class lawyer at the helm, looking like a friendly bank manager, sounding like a corporate executive and acting like a certain former grocer’s daughter. Some might say that was Thatcher’s finest achievement: the creation of the user-friendly Tony Blair to carry on her policies.
Political bankruptcy and hypocrisy: a lingering legacy
After three successive election defeats to Thatcher, Labour reinvented itself, ditched its commitment to public ownership and pandered to the right wing media in order to get elected. Under ‘New Labour’, the outcome was not only the abandonment of key principles and values, but also the abandonment of a constituency which had borne the brunt of Thatcher’s policies. The far right in Britain has had some degree of success in recent times by tapping into the frustrations within white working class communities in economically deprived areas. By abandoning this constituency of voters, Labour has let in the British National Party and the English Defence League (EDL). The EDL has especially attempted to whip up and tap into simplistic sentiments on the back of complex issues pertaining to identity, culture, race and class.
Another outcome is that millions of people now feel that none of the major pro-business parties now represent their needs, so they don’t bother to vote and express apathy towards politics and condemn politicians for their lack of moral standards and their hypocrisy. In fact, many have turned away from formal politics and have chosen to vent their frustrations or anger by other means.
For instance, recall for a moment the 2011 street disturbances that took place across Britain. PM David Cameron was eager to condemn them in an attempt to grasp the high ground. He stated in front of the TV cameras:
"These are sickening scenes – scenes of people looting, vandalising, thieving, robbing, scenes of people attacking police officers and even attacking fire crews as they are trying to put out fires. This is criminality, pure and simple, and it has to be confronted and defeated. People should be in no doubt that we are on the side of the law-abiding people, who are appalled by what has happened."
Other senior politicians came out with similar sentiments.
What the disturbances did was highlight the political and moral bankruptcy that Britain is drowning in after decades of policies that Thatcher began and ‘New Labour’ continued.
How about we turn Cameron’s words back on him and those who utter similar sentiments? Let us hold them to account, according to the criteria that they use to judge and condemn others.
Many of the politicians who were so keen to grasp the moral high ground have in the past sanctioned illegal wars or policies that have led to the deaths hundreds of thousands of people. Think back to the sanctions imposed on Iraq in the 1990s that led to the deaths of 500,000 children, all because a political leader would not adopt pro-western policies.
But you don't have to think back that far. In Libya, a similar war strategy, fully backed by Cameron, was put in place to remove another leader who won't tow the line. Such imperialist wars have been justified on the lie of ‘humanitarianism’. As the body count piles up in Syria right now, so does the hypocrisy.
Many of those who took part in the disturbances were in many respects the victims of 'greed is good' neo-liberal policies. Top politicians, with the media in tow, have for a long time been cheerleaders of the ‘free market’ approach and the criminals on Wall Street, or in the City of London, who eventually plunged millions into poverty across the world.
Look around the UK - the social deprivation, the rich who have got even richer and the inequality gap that has become a chasm. Then ask, what are the real crimes? Who are the real criminals? Who has done the most thieving, the most robbing, the most looting? Who has indulged in devastating vandalism and created fires from Libya to Afghanistan? Who has looted from the poor across the world and, through the system in place, has ensured wealth flows from bottom to top?
Who has marched into other people's countries and smashed them up?
Whose criminality is the worse? The politicians, the financiers, the proponents of economic dogma, which serves as a masking device for brutality, or the folk who have borne the brunt of it all and who then react?
While people who took to the streets did loot and help themselves to all manner of consumer goods, just who did they take their cue from? The great role models of the age, no doubt - the take now, pay later mentality of corporate Britain and the bankers - or, in the case of the bankers, take now and take again, but never pay back.
Such hypocrisy is a lingering legacy of the route which Thatcher’s neo-liberalism then Blair’s neo-imperialism set the country on and continues on today.
Tony Blair and the subverting of the British left
There was never any need for things to out turn this way. Unfortunately, they have. And despite the euphoria at the time, the Labour Party coming to power in 1997 did little to change the course of events.
Brand Blair was a PR person’s delight. There was no talk of the ‘s’ word (socialism) and Tony represented ‘New’ Labour and new values. He was tuned in and turned on to the meaningless ‘cool Britannia’ sound-bite manufactured by the media at that time. Indeed, Blair’s spin-doctors did a great job in placing the Tony brand at centre stage.
But the new brand soon became the old brand — grey, worn out and discredited. There was no substance to it. The small print proclaimed: moral crusades included. Blair took Britain to war no less than five times — an achievement unequalled by any other British PM.
Brand Blair was more often than not to be seen on the moral ground espousing the values of ‘freedom and democracy’, standing shoulder to shoulder with fellow war monger George W Bush. Tony was always at hand with gleaming smile to gloss over the murderous wrongdoings. He whitewashed clean with his catchy speeches and the ‘‘I’m just an ordinary guy like you’’ persona. He became Bush’s PR man par excellence.
As was the case with Thatcher, Blair was the handmaiden of the rich and powerful and helped deliver the Britain into the hands of elite interests who were intent on shattering the post WW2 Keynesian consensus and who are now intent on violently casting the world in their own image. It therefore comes as little surprise that since stepping down Blair has reaped tremendous rewards in return.
In 2012, The Telegraph newspaper in the UK discussed Tony Blair’s jet set lifestyle and his UK property portfolio of seven homes worth £14 million, including a £4 million Georgian townhouse in central London and a country estate (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/tony-blair/8999847/Blair-Inc-Ho...). Blair is paid in the region of £3 million a year to advise both JP Morgan, the US investment bank, and also Zurich International, the global insurer based in Switzerland. On top of that he runs his own consultancy firm - Tony Blair Associates - which advises the oil and gas rich governments of Kuwait and Kazakhstan.
A leader like Blair in part represents the end product of the US and UK Establishments’ decades-long attempt to cement the hegemony of elite interests by subverting and corrupting major components of the British left, not least the Labour Party (http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/articles/rrtalk.htm).
While the processes set in place that enabled a person such as Tony Blair (and now Miliband) to lead the former ‘party of the workers’ were certainly not all down to Thatcher’s doing, there is no denying that she most certainly paved the way.
The Blair Witch Project And The Betrayal Of Ordinary Working People
old killers .....
In the wake of Thatcher’s departure, I remember her victims. Patrick Warby’s daughter, Marie, was one of them. Marie, aged five, suffered from a bowel deformity and needed a special diet. Without it, the pain was excruciating. Her father was a Durham miner and had used all his savings. It was winter 1985, the Great Strike was almost a year old and the family was destitute. Although her eligibility was not disputed, Marie was denied help by the Department of Social Security. Later, I obtained records of the case that showed Marie had been turned down because her father was “affected by a Trade dispute”.
The corruption and inhumanity under Thatcher knew no borders. When she came to power in 1979, Thatcher demanded a total ban on exports of milk to Vietnam. The American invasion had left a third of Vietnamese children malnourished.
I witnessed many distressing sights, including infants going blind from a lack of vitamins. “I cannot tolerate this,” said an anguished doctor in a Saigon paediatric hospital, as we looked at a dying boy. Oxfam and Save the Children had made clear to the British government the gravity of the emergency. An embargo led by the US had forced up the local price of a kilo of milk up to ten times that of a kilo of meat. Many children could have been restored with milk. Thatcher’s ban held.
In neighbouring Cambodia, Thatcher left a trail of blood, secretly. In 1980, she demanded that the defunct Pol Pot regime – the killers of 1.7 million people – retain its “right” to represent their victims at the UN. Her policy was vengeance on Cambodia’s liberator, Vietnam. The British representative was instructed to vote with Pol Pot at the World Health Organisation, thereby preventing it from providing help to where it was needed more than anywhere on earth.
To conceal this outrage, the US, Britain and China, Pol Pot’s main backer, invented a “resistance coalition” dominated by Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge forces and supplied by the CIA at bases along the Thai border. There was a hitch. In the wake of the Irangate arms-for-hostages debacle, the US Congress had banned clandestine foreign adventures. “In one of those deals the two of them liked to make,” a senior Whitehall official told the Sunday Telegraph, “President Reagan put it to Thatcher that the SAS should take over the Cambodia show. She readily agreed.”
In 1983, Thatcher sent the SAS to train the “coalition” in its own distinctive brand of terrorism. Seven-man SAS teams arrived from Hong Kong, and British soldiers set about training “resistance fighters” in laying minefields in a country devastated by genocide and the world’s highest rate of death and injury as a result of landmines.
I reported this at the time, and more than 16,000 people wrote to Thatcher in protest. “I confirm,” she replied to opposition leader Neil Kinnock, “that there is no British government involvement of any kind in training, equipping or co-operating with the Khmer Rouge or those allied to them.” The lie was breathtaking. In 1991, the government of John Major admitted to parliament that the SAS had indeed trained the “coalition”. “We liked the British,” a Khmer Rouge fighter later told me. “They were very good at teaching us to set booby traps. Unsuspecting people, like children in paddy fields, were the main victims.”
When the journalists and producers of ITV’s landmark documentary, Death on the Rock, exposed how the SAS had run Thatcher’s other death squads in Ireland and Gibraltar, they were hounded by Rupert Murdoch’s “journalists”, then cowering behind the razor wire at Wapping. Although exonerated, Thames TV lost its ITV franchise.
In 1982, the Argentine cruiser, General Belgrano, was steaming outside the Falklands exclusion zone. The ship offered no threat, yet Thatcher gave orders for it to be sunk. Her victims were 323 sailors, including conscripted teenagers. The crime had a certain logic. Among Thatcher’s closest allies were mass murderers – Pinochet in Chile, Suharto in Indonesia, responsible for “many more than one million deaths” (Amnesty International). Although the British state had long armed the world’s leading tyrannies, it was Thatcher who brought a crusading zeal to the deals, talking up the finer points of fighter aircraft engines, hard-bargaining with bribe-demanding Saudi princes. I filmed her at an arms fair, stroking a gleaming missile. “I’ll have one of those!” she said.
In his arms-to-Iraq enquiry, Lord Richard Scott heard evidence that an entire tier of the Thatcher government, from senior civil servants to ministers, had lied and broken the law in selling weapons to Saddam Hussein. These were her “boys”. Thumb through old copies of the Baghdad Observer, and there are pictures of her boys, mostly cabinet ministers, on the front page sitting with Saddam on his famous white couch. There is Douglas Hurd and there is a grinning David Mellor, also of the Foreign Office, around the time his host was ordering the gassing of 5,000 Kurds. Following this atrocity, the Thatcher government doubled trade credits to Saddam.
Perhaps it is too easy to dance on her grave. Her funeral was a propaganda stunt, fit for a dictator: an absurd show of militarism, as if a coup had taken place. And it has. “Her real triumph”, said another of her boys, Geoffrey Howe, a Thatcher minister, “was to have transformed not just oneparty but two, so that when Labour did eventually return, the great bulk of Thatcherism was accepted as irreversible.”
In 1997, Thatcher was the first former prime minister to visit Tony Blair after he entered Downing Street. There is a photo of them, joined in rictus: the budding war criminal with his mentor. When Ed Milliband, in his unctuous “tribute”, caricatured Thatcher as a “brave” feminist hero whose achievements he personally “honoured”, you knew the old killer had not died at all.
John Pilger
Dance On Thatcher's Grave, But Remember, There Has Been A Coup In Britain