Here’s my take on the Riots:
For a gold-plated example of progressive sneering, check out the Nobel Prize lecture of Harold Pinter:
‘There are no hard distinctions between what is real and what is unreal, nor between what is true and what is false. A thing is not necessarily either true or false; it can be both true and false.’
Tell that to the ruined shopkeepers across London.
Thus every day in every way our society is infiltrated by divisive sneering. Most of it emanates from publicly funded organisations captured by the sneering classes (universities, BBC, NGOs, local councils, quangos). And over the years the consequences of this tsunami of state-subsidised sneering compound up, not least in the way people think about what they themselves represent in society and what society ‘owes’ to them.
This in turn gnaws at deepest instincts of personal self-respect. How dare the government make ‘cuts’? It’s my money, especially if I have done nothing to earn it!
The multiculturalist chattering classes see the looters and rioters with mixed emotions. There is lurking (sometimes not so lurking) pride that ‘the system’ has been ‘challenged’ so brutally by these ‘protesters’ who have ‘reclaimed’ (sic) the streets. The underpowered and faltering police response has been noted and approved. It is, ahem, embarrassing that these fine warriors are identified with poverty and deprivation, yet manage to organise themselves through expensive mobile kit. And it’s awkward that certain ethnic communities quickly mobilised to defend themselves. But the main thing is that the ‘under-class’ offered ‘resistance’! Bring it on.
We can draw some shreds of comfort from the fact that left wing forces now pin their hopes on this under-class. Back in 1848 Karl Marx himself used language likely to dismay people listening to the Today programme:
The “dangerous class”, [lumpenproletariat] the social scum, that passively rotting mass thrown off by the lowest layers of the old society…
Those of us who refuse to succumb to progressive nihilism must heave a deep sigh and confront the extraordinary horror seen on the streets of London and other cities and towns.
It’s bad enough having to pay to put it right – money which could have been spent on new investment. Most difficult to tackle in its vile abstractness is the philosophical problem: the insolent assumption that anything (anyone?) can be challenged and destroyed simply because the rioters and looters feel like it.
And the implicit blackmail threat that if we don’t give these people whatever they want, they’ll start it up again.
The looters in some dim way probably talk among each other about ‘respect’, but in substance they don’t respect other people, the law, any idea of self restraint. Above all, they don’t respect or begin to understand the slow power of compound interest to build and sustain wealth down the generations.
They don’t know where the value of what they are smashing and burning in fact originates. They don’t know where the streets they plunder come from.
And that’s the most ruinous feature of the Labour Party’s support for the unrelenting deconstruction of British values. It has created ignorant, violent decontextualised people completely detached from history – and morality.
In short, this is a sign of the death of common sense. It shows that there are clusters of moral parasites living in the UK who literally have nothing ‘in common’ with the vast majority, yet who can use technology created by clever, disciplined hard-working people to cause immense damage, almost out of nowhere.
They’ll be curbed and contained, of course. But then what?