When is a massacre OK, when not?

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

30 August 2013

What is the difference between killing people with a spear and starving them to death by failing to ensure that they have enough to eat?

This is the question that the Chinese political philosopher Mencius posed to Chinese rulers in the period of internecine conflict known as the Warring States (403-221 BC).

Today, in the light of the daily carnage in Syria, we might ask what is the difference between killing people with explosives and killing them with nerve gas?

Only this week a regime pilot dropped an incendiary bomb on a school courtyard in northern Syria that killed, maimed or burned scores of children, leaving them with napalm-like burns all over their bodies. The atrocity was hardly mentioned in the news.

For two and a half years, since the revolt broke out on 15 March 2011, the western powers have sat on their hands, rejecting incessant pleas for help from the motley band of freedom-fighters and jihadis who have rebelled against the vicious sectarian regime of Bashar al-Assad.

During that period, more than 100 000 people have been slaughtered, according to UN figures for June 2013, an estimated 50 % of these being civilians, while about four million citizens have been displaced from their homes within Syria with another two million fleeing to seek asylum in neighbouring countries.

Then on 21 August 2013 in the al-Ghouta district of Damascus, the Syrian capital, an estimated total of over a thousand people were slaughtered indiscriminately in a poison gas attack attributed by most experts to the al-Assad regime.

Suddenly, the western powers woke up from their slumber and vowed military retribution on the perpetrators.

Those who had been quite happy for the dictator to slaughter tens of thousands of his fellow citizens with conventional weapons found it quite unacceptable that he should use nerve gas to kill them.

On this issue, Antigone1984 sides with Mencius. We do not believe that blowing someone to smithereens with conventional rocket shells is any less morally reprehensive than killing them with poison gas.

A letter from reader Colin Macnee criticizing western inaction on Syria, which was published in the London Guardian newspaper yesterday 29 August 2013, sums up our view precisely:

“Had more been done to arm the rebels a year or more ago, that most venal and brutal regime would likely have been toppled by now, tens of thousands of lives spared, the ravaging of the country mitigated, and the influence of Islamic fanatics minimised.”

In our post  “Crocodile Tears”  published as far back as 3 April 2012, we said:

“Antigone1984 believes that the sword is mightier than the pen.

“Hence, we are in favour of armed humanitarian intervention to save the lives of human beings threatened with annihilation by brutal regimes.

In 2011 we supported armed humanitarian intervention in Libya – as did the “international community”. Unlike that same “international community”, we support it today in Syria.

Are the lives of Syrians less important than the lives of Libyans?

Or is it just that, compared with Libya, Syria has fewer oil reserves to be exploited by the international oil majors?” 

Given the disastrous outcome of the recent western occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, we do not favour putting “boots on the ground” in Syria. However, we do believe that the rebels should be equipped with adequate weaponry and trained to use it. Above all, a no-fly zone should be imposed, since it is al-Assad’s monopoly of air-power that has given him a crucial advantage over the rebels.

As Guardian reader Mcnee also said in the letter mentioned above,

“Irrespective of who carried out the gas attack in Damascus, the catalogue of atrocities committed by the Syrian armed forces and militia thugs in support of a regime which has institutionalised torture is sufficient reason for limited military strikes to limit the use of air power against the rebels.”

The western powers have spent the last week threatening token air-strikes against the regime – possibly using guided missiles rather than piloted airplanes –  to punish it for using poison gas at al-Ghouta. The aim is simply to dissuade the regime from using this weapon again, not to take sides in the conflict or to bring about regime change.

We think that this is the wrong approach and might well provoke the regime into committing even more heinous acts. We believe that the object of any western action should be precisely to achieve regime change – to boost the rebels and dethrone the despot.

All the more so since – while the western powers have turned a deaf ear to pleas for help – the Syrian dictator has not wanted for allies of his own. Vladimir Putin, the Russian dictator, has been supplying him with heavy weaponry, rockets and ammunition, while Lebanon’s Hezbollah militia and Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have provided guerrilla fighters and troop reinforcements as well as military hardware.

The conflict is asymmetrical, as a result, with assorted bands of badly coordinated rebels facing an overwhelmingly superior despotic regime backed by powerful outside interests.

There is an inescapable similarity with civil-war Spain (1936-1939), when the Great Powers looked the other way as Franco’s fascists decimated the democratic opposition and set up a brutal dictatorship that was to last for 35 years.

As we wrote in our post “Fiddling Nero”  on 9 September 2012,

“Fascist Italy supplied Franco’s Falangists with troops – the notorious ‘Black Shirts’ – as well as planes, tanks and machine-guns. In 1937, at Franco’s request, Nazi Germany sent in the Luftwaffe’s Condor Legion to bomb Durango and Guernica.

Meanwhile, in the Foreign Office and the Quay d’Orsay the leading statesmen of liberal Europe twiddled their thumbs.

But worse was to come.

In 1938, at the height of the Spanish civil war, the British and French Prime Ministers, Neville Chamberlain and Édouard Daladier, agreed to appease Franco’s ally Hitler by signing an agreement in Munich which ceded to Germany the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia.

This supine agreement did not appease Hitler, needless to say. It only whetted his appetite for more. He went on to occupy the rest of Czechoslovakia with impunity. It was only when he invaded Poland in 1939 that Britain and France reluctantly decided to take action.

But by then it was too late to save Spain. The Falangists had triumphed. Democracy was snuffed out and would not return until after Franco’s death in 1975.”

Is this what the western powers want for Syria?

 ——–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

——-

Posted in Military, Syria, UN, USA | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Buridan’s ass

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

18 August 2013

If I must choose the lesser of two evils, I will choose neither”.

Karl Kraus (1874-1936), Austrian satirist, poet and playwright.

Antigone1984:

Awkward bugger!

——–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

——-

Posted in Austria, Literature, Philosophy | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

From Martha’s Vineyard to the Morgues of Cairo

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

16 August 2013

ANYONE FOR TENNIS?

Mojito, anyone?  Manhattan? Or perhaps – why not, nothing wrong with  aspirations – a Cuba Libre?

An estimated 2 000 civilians were massacred by the military dictatorship in Egypt two days ago on 14 August 2013.

What was the reaction of US President Barack Obama?

According to the digital edition of the New York Times on 14 August 2014,

Mr [John] Kerry [US Secretary of State] announced no punitive measures, while President Obama, vacationing…on Martha’s Vineyard [an island retreat for the rich and famous off Cape Cod in Massachusetts], had no public reaction. As his chief diplomat [Mr Kerry] was speaking of a “pivotal moment for Egypt,” the president was playing golf at a private club….he appeared determined not to allow events in Egypt to interrupt a day that, besides golf, included cocktails at the home of a major political donor, Brian Roberts.”

Obama fiddled, then, while Rome burned.

Nice work, if you can get it.

Martini, anyone?  Sex on the Beach? Staten Island Ferry?

The next day, as the full extent of the massacre became known, Obama was flushed out into the open.

Seeking to tailor his comments to the gravity of the situation as the dead lay still unburied in the streets of Cairo, the US President (according to a report in today’s London Guardian newspaper) uttered the following immortal words:

We appreciate the complexity of the situation. We recognize that change takes time. There are going to be false starts and difficult days. We know that democratic transitions are measured not in months or even years but sometimes in generations.”

Verily the words of a Cicero redivivus, a Demosthenes of our time, an Abraham Lincoln redux.

So everything’s all right then.

We’ve given the Egyptian generals “generations” to bring peace to their benighted country.

A generation is generally reckoned to be thirty years.

How many generations does Mr Obama have in mind, we wonder.

And now – pu – leese! – can we get back to that game of golf?

And “Anyone for tennis?”

According to the Guardian, Obama also issued a reminder of why the United States had supported the ousting of Mohamed Morsi, Egypt’s democratically elected president.

While Mohammed Morsi was elected president in a democratic election, his government was not inclusive and did not respect the views of all Egyptians. We know that many Egyptians, millions of Egyptians, perhaps even a majority of Egyptians, were calling for a change in course.”

Antigone1984:

The Egyptian army staged a coup d’état on Wednesday 3 July 2013 toppling the democratically elected president Mohamed Morsi, the candidate of the Muslim Brotherhood, who won 52 % of the popular vote in the 2012 presidential election.

Are we to take it then that governments subject to street protests warrant military intervention to topple them?

However you spin it, four legs, a trunk and two tusks make an elephant.

When the democratically elected leader of a state is overthrown by the army, this is a coup d’état. There is no other word for it.

One could equally say this of Mr Obama’s own government:

While Barack Obama was elected president in a democratic election, his government is not inclusive and does not respect the views of all Americans. We know that many Americans, millions of Americans, perhaps even a majority of Americans, are calling for a change in course.”

Does this justify the overthrow of the American Government in a military coup d’état?

Mohamed Morsi assumed office as President of Egypt almost exactly a year ago on 30 June 2012 . Today, unceremoniously stripped of office, he languishes in military custody.  The army has ordered the arrest of the Muslim Brotherhood’s entire leadership in an attempt to decapitate the organisation and so render it ineffectual.

These facts give the lie to the propaganda being peddled by the putschists led by General Abdel Fatah al-Sisi. After the coup, the following lie was broadcast by the Egyptian army command:

“Wisdom, true nationalism and constructive human values that all religions have called for, require us now to avoid taking any exceptional or arbitrary measures against any faction or political current. Peaceful protest and freedom of expression are rights guaranteed to everyone, which Egyptians have earned as one of the most important gains of their glorious revolution.”

Why, however, the weak-kneed reaction from the West?

Well, in the first place, Mohamed Morsi led a government controlled by the Muslim Brotherhood, a motley crew of conservative Muslims, who could not be relied on to toe the party-line set by the global superpower.

In any case, western attitudes towards Muslim-dominated governments have turned increasingly negative since the attack by a group of Muslims on the World Trade Centre in New York on 11 September 2001.

Another running sore was the Brotherhood’s not wholly cooperative attitude towards Israel, America’s principal ally in the Middle East.

Last but not least, the Egyptian military   is receiving annual “aid” amounting to an estimated $1.5 billion from the United States.

In these circumstances, it is a racing certainty that the US was advised in advance of the impending putsch and okayed it.

Actually, a lot of this US “aid” appears never to leave the US. According to media reports, it is used to subsidise the jobs of American workers who make tanks that the US sends to the generals in Egypt. The generals then use the tanks to overthrow a democratically elected president and crush his supporters.

If it looks like the U.S. effectively colluded in a counterrevolution, then all the talk about democracy and Islam, about a new American relationship with the Islamic world, will be judged to have been the height of hypocrisy,” said Bruce O. Riedel, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, in a comment reported in the New York Times.

During a recent visit to Pakistan, Mr Kerry is reported to have said that the Egyptian military had been “restoring democracy” when it ousted Mr. Morsi.

The New York Times also reports the following:

“Travelling in Amman, Jordan, General Martin E. Dempsey, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters that he had not yet spoken with his Egyptian counterparts.

“Asked what he planned to say to Egyptian military leaders, General Dempsey said, ‘It’s really the same message: The path forward for Egypt that will allow us to maintain our close military relationship and allow them to achieve their goals is the commitment to a road map, keeping violence levels as low as possible.’”

So that’s the bottom line – maintaining the close military relationship between the Egyptian military putschists and the US Government.

And having a “road map”.

Cheers, chaps. Drink up. Santé. Another Martini for me, if you don’t mind.

Antigone1984:

We repeat what we said in our post “No, Mr ElBaradei, no!” on 7 July 2013:

The way to remove a president who has been democratically elected at the ballot-box is to vote him out of office at the ballot-box.

 The army has no political role in a democracy.

 It is not for unelected generals to take the law into their own hands and decide off their own bat how a country is to be run.

 What happened on Wednesday 3 July 2013 was the overnight transmogrification of Egypt from a democratic polity, however imperfect, into a military dictatorship.

 

The end does not justify the means.

——–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

——-

Posted in Egypt, USA | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The market rules, OK?

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

12 August 2013

Here we go again!

Having systematically pandered to employer interests while turning a blind eye to the needs of Britain’s labour force throughout the 13 years it was in government (1997-2010), the UK’s self-styled “Labour” Party, now condemned to impotent opposition, wants to be seen as a champion of British workers.

It seems that British firms have actually been taking advantage of their legal right to employ workers from other Member States of the European Union (EU), a cornerstone of which is the free inter-state movement of labour.

Well, we can’t have that, can we?

This morning the London Guardian newspaper trailed a speech to be given today by Labour’s shadow immigration minister, Chris Bryant.

In his draft speech Mr Bryant is quoted as saying: “It is unfair that unscrupulous employers whose only interest seems to be finding labour as cheaply as possible will recruit workers in large numbers in low-wage countries in the EU”.

Oh dear!

It seems that Mr Bryant is in need of some basic lessons in market economics.

Employers looking to employ workers at the cheapest possible rates is what capitalism has been about since the guild system collapsed at the end of the Middle Ages.

Moreover, under EU rules, to which Britain has signed up in full knowledge of the facts, employers have a perfect right to ignore local workers and go fishing for staff in any of the EU’s 28 Member States (with the exception, until 1 January 2014, of Romania and Bulgaria and, until 1 July 2020, of Croatia, which joined the EU on 1 July 2013).

In accordance with these rules, a huge amount of cheap labour from other EU countries, particularly Poland, was induced to migrate to Britain during the 13 years of Labour misrule – without provoking a pipsqueak of protest from the authorities.

Of course, in the face of cut-throat competition from cheap foreign labour, wages in Britain plummeted, particularly at the bottom end of the pay scales.

But what did they expect?

This is what capitalism is all about.

And the funny thing is that the Labour Party is a paid-up card-carrying cheer-leader for both the capitalism system and the European Union.

Did I hear someone use the word “hypocrisy” just now?

Could it be, in fact, that there is a UK parliamentary election looming in 2015 and that the Labour Party is currently languishing in the opinion polls?

Could it be, in fact, that the Labour Party is cynically trying to exploit the widespread popular resentment at falling wages and high unemployment that are the direct result of policies which the Labour Party itself has espoused hook, line and sinker?

Surely not?

Now that would be unthinkable.

Or would it?

——–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

——-

Posted in Europe, Poland, UK | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Hold the front page!

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

19 July 2013

 

You cannot hope

to bribe or twist,

thank God! the

British journalist.

 

But, seeing what

the man will do

unbribed, there’s

no occasion to.

 

Light verse by poet and British civil servant Humbert Wolfe (1885-1940), who was born in Milan but brought up in Bradford.

——–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

——-

 

 

Posted in Literature, UK | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

The best lack all conviction

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

18 July 2013

Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;

Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,

The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere

The ceremony of innocence is drowned;

The best lack all conviction, while the worst

Are full of passionate intensity.

 

Excerpt from “The Second Coming”, a short poem in two stanzas by the Anglo-Irish poet William Butler Yeats (1865-1939) published in 1921 when the rebellion by Irish patriots, which broke out at Easter 1916, against the 750-year-old yoke of English domination was ending unsatisfactorily with the unprecedented partition of Ireland – hitherto a single country throughout its recorded history – into two parts:  an independent state, a majority of whose citizens were Catholic, in the south of the country and the rump of British Ireland, still controlled by Britain today, in the six of the nine counties of the northern Irish Province of Ulster that were dominated by historically anti-Catholic Protestants culturally oriented towards Britain. The unsatisfactory nature of this compromise, as embodied in the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, has been evident ever since. The treaty was presented to the Irish independence negotiators as a take-it-or-leave-it once-and-for-all settlement by the British imperial government of the day –  with precisely the same heavy-handed hauteur as that same government had displayed not so many years earlier when it imposed similar “unequal treaties” on an ailing China.  Today, as we write, Belfast, the capital of British Ulster, is currently the stage for nightly sectarian riots, ostensibly related to religion but in reality connected with the refusal of Ulster Protestants to accept the increasing influence of those citizens of northern Ireland who seek, wisely or otherwise, to restore the historic unity of Ireland as a single polity.

Antigone1984:

Not that we have any time for the sanctimonious priest-ridden log-rolling mafia that has ruled the roost in southern Ireland since it gained independence following the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921. The Ulster Protestants have a good case for not wanting to be dragged into the clutches of the political shysters that call the shots in Dublin.

——–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

——-

Posted in China, Ireland, Literature, UN | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Gun running

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

17 July 2013

They abuse human rights. So let’s give them the wherewithal to make a good job of it.

This is the message of the vicious rightwing regime in power in London to other states around the world which routinely trample on the human rights of their citizens.

If you have the lolly, London says, we’ll give you the guns.

Human rights? We’ll just turn a blind eye to them – at least so long as the dosh is rolling in.

It may be that at international forums the UK makes a song-and-dance about its commitment to human rights. But that’s strictly for the birds. That’s just a public relations exercise. Propaganda.

What we’re really interested in is your money. That’s what counts with us Brits.

And if afterwards you use the weapons we sell you to massacre your citizens? Well, too bad. That’s your affair.

This was spelt out with crystal-clarity by the UK regime’s frontman, Dave “loadsamoney” Cameron, the British prime minister, when he led a herd of money-grubbing UK fast-buck merchants to the repressive central Asian state of Kazakhstan at the end of June 2013. On that occasion, according to press reports, he made it clear to journalists that Britain placed economic concerns above human rights.

According to an article in the London Guardian on 1 July 2013, Cameron admitted that he was there “to promote British businesses rather than challenge the authoritarian Kazakh president, Nursultan Nazarbayev, on human rights. The prime minister…said he would only raise human rights with the president as a subsidiary issue, despite a warning from Amnesty International that the former Soviet Republic has a ‘disgraceful’ record.”

So there you have it, condemned out of his own mouth! The UK does not give a toss for human rights. Filthy lucre is what we are after.

This barefaced commitment to immorality is confirmed in an article by Richard Norton-Taylor in the London Guardian today 17 July 2013.

Norton-Taylor says that, according to a cross-party committee of UK MPs, more than 3,000 current export licences for arms – as well as military equipment worth more than £12bn – have been approved by the UK for 27 countries classified by the UK’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) as being “of concern” because of their poor human rights record.

Countries for which significant sales have been approved include Israel – the destination of the bulk of the arms sales – Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, China, and Zimbabwe, according to the arms export controls committee’s annual report published today 17 July 2013.

According to the article, committee chairman Sir John Stanley, said: “The scale of the extant strategic licences to the FCO’s 27 countries of human rights concern puts into stark relief the inherent conflict between the government’s arms exports and human rights policies.”

He added: “The government should apply significantly more cautious judgments when considering arms export licence applications for goods to authoritarian regimes‚ which might be used to facilitate internal repression‚ in contravention of the government’s stated policy.”

The approval of nearly 400 arms export licences for “Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories” includes components for body armour, parts for all-wheel-drive vehicles with ballistic protection, assault rifles, pistols, military support vehicles, and small arms ammunition.

Other exports included cryptographic equipment used for decoding and encoding communications.

More than 400 current export licences to the hereditary dictatorship in Saudi Arabia – a state notorious not only for the ruthless repression of public dissent but also for its medieval punishments, including public beheadings – include vehicles, components for military communications equipment, crowd-control ammunition, hand grenades, and smoke/pyrotechnic and teargas/irritant ammunition.

In flat contradiction of the facts, the UK regime claims that it “will not issue licences where we judge there is a clear risk that the proposed export might provoke or prolong regional or internal conflicts, or which might be used to facilitate internal repression”.

However, the MPs say, “that does not appear to have been so in the case of the deployment of Saudi forces in British armoured vehicles to Bahrain…thereby enabling Bahraini security forces to end, sometimes violently, predominantly peaceful demonstrations”.

Demonstrations in Bahrain were suppressed by the hereditary  dictatorship in 2011. Despite this, British exports to Bahrain under current licences include small arms ammunition, command communications control and intelligence software, technology for command communications control and intelligence software, assault rifles, military communications equipment, pistols, weapon sights, and components for machine guns.

——–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

——-

Posted in Bahrain, China, Israel, Saudi Arabia, UK | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Never say die

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

16 July 2013

Dum spiro, spero.

While there’s life, there’s hope.

This is a much-used quotation, whose derivation it is difficult to ascertain. The sentiment is reflected in similar, less succinct, passages by Greek pastoral poet Theocritus (310-250 BC) and Roman orator, statesman, essayist and letter writer Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC) .

——–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

——-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Literature | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The artist as reactionary

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

15 July 2013

The following interchange is from an interview with English novelist Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966) by Julian Jebb in the Hyde Park Hotel, London, in 1962. Waugh, a crusty old-school crosspatch, was in bed at the time.

Jebb: Do you think it just to describe you as a reactionary?

Waugh: An artist must be a reactionary. He has to stand out against the tenor of the age and not go flopping along; he must offer some little opposition.

The interview was published in the third series of the collection of literary interviews published by the Paris Review in 1967 under the rubric “Writers at Work”.

——–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

——-

Posted in Art, Literature | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The art market – an oxymoron

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

14 July 2013

CULTURE “A SALEABLE COMMODITY”

Rarely have we come across a point of view so philistine as that put forward by Maria Miller – culture minister in the UK’s reactionary Tory government – in a speech to cultural bigwigs at the British Museum on 24 April 2013.

In an article earlier same day trailing the speech, Charlotte Higgins, chief arts writer of the London Guardian, says that according to Miller – making her first speech on the arts despite having been appointed to the culture post as long ago as September 2012 – British culture should be presented as a “commodity” and a “compelling product” to be sold at home and abroad.

While pledging to fight her corner for the arts vis-à-vis the UK Treasury, Miller says the argument for continued arts funding must be made primarily on economic grounds so that it “will get traction, not in the press, but with my colleagues – and with the country at large”.

She continues: “In an age of austerity, when times are tough and money is tight, our focus must be on culture’s economic impact … We must demonstrate the healthy dividends that our investment [in the arts] continues to pay.”

She maintains that the contribution of the arts goes beyond direct economic impact, helping create what amounts to a brand identity of Britain overseas – with British arts helping to market exports.

“I would argue that culture should be seen as the standard bearer for our efforts to engage in cultural diplomacy, to develop soft power, and to compete, as a nation, in both trade and investment.”

“British culture is perhaps the most powerful and most compelling product we have available to us…British culture and creativity are now more in demand than ever before … we should be increasingly proud to use the label ‘made in Britain’. The world clearly thinks this is a commodity worth buying into.”

Miller argues that when British arts are exported, they act as a kind of “relationship marketing” exercise that helps “attract investment which will drive jobs and opportunities here at home. It opens doors for UK plc and makes it easier for businesses to export and expand.”

Antigone1984:

Unsurprisingly, Maria Miller worked in advertising before becoming a Member of Parliament. With views like those set out above, she must surely have been selected for the post of UK culture secretary on the grounds that she had no qualifications whatever for the job.

Her view – and by definition that of the government she presents – is precisely that on which Matthew Arnold (1822-1888), English poet, essayist and social critic of the Victorian age, launched a ferocious attack in his philippic Culture and Anarchy published in 1869.

For Arnold, culture is the classical ideal of human perfection involving a never-satisfied search for “sweetness and light” [beauty and intelligence] – and the desire to diffuse these among mankind.

Not much of that in Maria Miller’s speech, you might think.

Matthew’s attack on the philistine pursuit of wealth clashes head-on with the instrumentalization of culture that is recommended by the culture secretary as a way of making a bob or two.

The following passage from Culture and Anarchy is as apposite today as it was in the Victorian age: “….men are always apt to regard wealth as a precarious end in itself; and certainly they have never been so apt thus to regard it as they are in England at the present time. Never did people believe anything more firmly than nine Englishmen out of ten at the present day believe that our greatness and welfare are proved by our being so very rich….The people who believe most that our greatness and welfare are proved by our being very rich, and who most give their lives and thoughts to becoming rich, are just the very people whom we call Philistines.”

According to the leftwing literary critic Raymond Williams (1921-1988), the commodification of culture set in from 1730 onwards. In his book Culture and Society (1958), Williams says that thenceforth the production of art was coming to be regarded as one of a number of specialized kinds of production, subject to much the same conditions as general production. Referring to literature in particular, he suggests that this development “followed inevitably from the institution of commercial publishing. The novel, in particular, had quickly become a commodity….the effects were also obvious in poetry, on which the impact of a market relationship was inevitably severe.” There were grumblings that literature had become a trade.

This led to a Romantic reaction from the artistic community.

“In this same period,” Williams continues, “arose the theory of the ‘superiority of art’, as the seat of imaginative truth and an emphasis on the artist as a special kind of person, an autonomous genius….at a time when the artist is being described as just one more producer of a commodity for the market, he is describing himself as a specially endowed person,  the guiding light of the common life.” Williams goes on to say that this process also involved “an emphasis on the embodiment in art of certain human values, capacities, energies, which the development of society towards an industrial civilization was felt to be threatening or even destroying”.

Which is where Matthew Arnold comes in and Maria Miller goes out.

The idea of “art for art’s sake” – l’art pour l’art, die Kunst für die Kunst”, ars gratia artis – came into its own in the latter half of 19 C with exponents such as French poet and novelist Théophile Gautier (1811-1872), Irish dramatist, novelist and poet Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) and English aesthete, essayist and critic Walter Pater (1839-1894).

The idea is that art has an intrinsic value divorced from any didactic, moral, religious, utilitarian or commercial function.

In his essay The Soul of Man Under Socialism, published in 1891 in the Pall Mall Gazette, Oscar Wilde wrote:

“A work of art is the unique result of a unique temperament. Its beauty comes from the fact that the author is what he is. It has nothing to do with the fact that other people want what they want. Indeed, the moment that an artist takes notice of what other people want, and tries to supply the demand, he ceases to be an artist, and becomes a dull or an amusing craftsman, an honest or a dishonest tradesman. He has no further claim to be considered as an artist.”

Once you accept Maria Miller’s proposition that the end of culture is to serve the needs of the market, then you necessarily jettison the idea of the work of art being its own justification. Once artists pervert their inspiration to satisfy the (often ignorant) demands of the buyer or collector, they may conceivably come up with a saleable commodity. What they will no longer be doing is creating a work of art.

 

Note to readers: This is one of a number of posts that we have it in mind to publish from time to time on topics relating to events which occurred in April, May and June 2013, when production of the blog was intermittent.

 

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 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

 8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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