After a conflagration of arson attacks, riots and
looting in several British cities, including the capital, London, there
is a sense of order having been restored from a massive mobilisation of
police forces.
There now follows the tracking down and prosecution
of individuals involved in the mayhem. Conservative Prime Minister is
leading “the fight back” to punish anyone who has inflicted damage and
destruction to Britain’s society.
The events have visibly shocked the political
establishment of all parties, police chiefs and the mainstream media.
But what should be more shocking is the myopic and incredibly banal
commentary that is being offered to “explain” the outburst of street
disturbances and violence.
As pundits sit in comfy television studios trading
inane insights about the “evils” of individual immorality, criminality,
dysfunctional families, gang culture – in the background, so to speak,
are the glaring signs scrolling across the screens of the cause of this
societal breakdown. And yet the preponderant signs escape the mental
radar of pundits and politicians alike.
The fact that the capitalist economic system is in
worldwide meltdown is not even registered in the mainstream commentary.
This is the system that the mainstream political parties have
facilitated and fawned over, whether Labour, Conservative or Liberal,
and which has resulted in social devastation across Britain while the
corporate and financial elite has ransacked economic resources. This
system of legalised looting has been going on for decades, but certainly
took on a precipitous dynamic starting with Cameron’s Conservative
predecessor Margaret Thatcher in the early 1980s. Labour’s Tony Blair
and Gordon Brown were merely purveyors of the same dynamic.
In surveying today’s Britain, Karl Marx words are so
right: “An accumulation of wealth at one pole of society indicates an
accumulation of misery and overwork at the other”. That is the hallmark
of capitalism in today’s Britain, the US and Europe.
All other problems are largely secondary in
causation. Crime, racist policing, disorder, the lack of police budgets
to restore order (so ironic), alienation and self-destruction, and so
many other ills including the mobilisation of resources to fund illegal
wars – most of our present day problems flow from the tap root of
dysfunction that is the capitalist economy.
Speaking in the House of Commons Thursday, Prime
Minister Cameron's “explanation” for the outbreak of street disturbances
across England demonstrates a total ignorance and poverty of
understanding on his part of the nature of the breakdown in his society.
He blames it on “criminality pure and simple” and “pockets of sickness”
and “lack of individual morality and responsibility”.
This view is largely echoed in the British political establishment of all parties and the media.
The looting, thievery and lawlessness that Cameron so
condemns is but the reflection at the street level of British society
of what is taking place on a much greater scale at the upper echelons of
government and the economy.
Despite the appearance of pinstripe suits and
well-groomed accents, we can, if we are honest, see decades of looting
and thievery of economic and financial resources by corporate elites
aided and abetted by Labour and Conservative governments. The taxpayer
bailout of corrupt banks initiated by Labour PM Gordon Brown and now
overseen by Cameron, paid for in large part by austerity in public
spending cuts, is but the latest manifestation of official robbing of
the majority to swell the already outrageous wealth of the ruling elite
class.
Cameron and his gang of plumy-accented thugs are
gunning for $150 billion in public spending cuts to pay for the criminal
enterprise known as British banking. This is racketeering that a street
gang in London’s east end can only marvel at… and indeed, in a very
real way, only emulate.
Combined with that looting by the elite we see the
total lawlessness and criminality of British governments who have worked
hand in glove with other criminal governments to launch wars of
aggression (Nuremburg standard war crimes) in Afghanistan, Iraq, and now
Libya, resulting in the deaths of over one million civilians. Where is
individual responsibility for that mass murder and destruction Mr
Cameron?
This social decay and necrotism is a symptom of the
collapse of capitalism, an economic system that enriches an elite at the
cost of the majority. It polarises political power beyond democratic
accountability to the point where, among other deformities, wars and
planetary looting are being carried out even blatantly against the
consent of the majority public.
So when Cameron and his political cronies fulminate
about pockets of sickness, looting, criminality, lawlessness, and the
need for “consequences for actions” – his words and exhortations are so
richly ironic and benighted.
For he is inadvertently describing the very society
and world that capitalism creates in its own image. The indoctrination
of Cameron's mind and that of the entire political establishment
prevents them from seeing the inferno for the sparks. An inferno that
the government of Cameron and his Labour predecessors, and in other
western countries, have been dousing fuel on with their slavish policies
aiding and abetting capitalist kleptocracy, both at home and abroad.
The real lessons from Britain will not dawn on, never
mind be drawn on, by mainstream politicians or media. And the same can
be said for the US and other western countries. To paraphrase a slogan
used by former US President Clinton: “It’s the capitalist economy,
stupid.”
Finian Cunningham is a Global Research Correspondent based in Belfast, Ireland.
Source: Global Research