Variant issue12    www.variant.org.uk    variantmag@btinternet.com    back to issue list

Contents

The Tainted Word
William Clark

The Iron Chancellor
Robin Ramsay

Remembrances of things past
Louise Crawford

I am not not-innocent
James Kelman

Tales of the Great Unwashed
Ian Brotherhood

Bob Holman Interview
William Clark

Concerns about the nature and application of the new Terrorism Act Discussion

Zine and Comix Review
Mark Pawson

New Labour's Arms Trade
Phil England

As it never was
Peter Kravitz
_____________________________________________________ 
 

The Tainted Word
William Clark

They are like to children sitting in the marketplace, and speaking one to another, and saying: We have piped to you, and you have not danced: we have mourned, and you have not wept.
(Luke chapter 7)

Tales from the script
Many things are done in an underhand and unaccountable way in the arts. Not just decision-making, but the political ideologies which are enforced upon it. At times people have to go to preposterous lengths to disguise this.
The Scottish Arts Council (SAC) organised--and presumably paid for--a quiet event for an audience of 'arts managers' in Glasgow on 14/4/99. Grimly called "Facing the Future," for some reason this took the form of one lecture by Ian Christie, then director of the think tank 'Demos'. After an obviously unwanted debate (chaired by Mrs. Jack McConnell, Labour Party etc.) in which the audience clearly did not accept what they were told, the final words from Seona Reid (then Director of the SAC) convey the impression that some form of transaction had taken place, that "SAC was working to ensure the arts were incorporated into the range of Government policies--but arts organisations and artists needed to play their part in making this a reality".
Reality fabrication had also been the purpose of Christie's talk, "A New Agenda for the Arts" which was also slyly pushed around the SAC by 'colleagues' who followed the lead and felt the need to be seen to be urging others towards Christie's big idea. This is the brainless fraud that there is no need to form an arts policy distinct from that dictated in London. Christie even offers the golden promise that if "autonomous Scotland" were to follow the government line we would be the "envy and fascination" of the rest of the country. 
The problem is the Scottish electorate voted for less dictatorship from London, not more. People want something different for the future not more of the same old shite. But there arts policy has remained despite the wheeling in and switching on of a couple of new appointees.
Tacking on the word 'Scottish' did not disguise the obvious difficulty with Christie's little talk: that it is propaganda, that he is working for the government and that he is bullshitting people. The tone is of an Oxford graduate on the lowest rung of the Civil service, perhaps in a propaganda department for some colonial enterprise. His statements such as "policy debate about 'the arts' is one of the most dispiriting areas of stand-offs and entrenched interests in our intellectual life", don't make much sense in Scotland--what policy debate? 
Christie was employed to discern the future environment for the arts for the Scottish, Welsh and English Arts Councils in 1996. So this was money for old rope, ignominiously flogged yet again in the SAC Annual Report of 1999 which cites Christie's talk as the sole example of its organisation of arts policy debate. An example of nihilistic apathy.
Christie even points to "policy debate" as a key problem, but what he really seems to mean is any independent thought and free discussion not to the government's liking and eh...actual culture, art. What is dispiriting is that his Pol Pot equation aims to exclude first all the arts administrators including all partnerships with private business and secondly any artist who has expressed dissatisfaction:
"...the arts establishment is split on tediously familiar lines. On the one hand, the official arts world is preoccupied with the economics of cultural policy--subsidy, value for money, partnership with business and a goal of reaching new mass audiences ('art for all'). Ranged against it are members of an establishment of discontented artistes - including those who have recently announced that they were forming an 'alternative arts council' to seek more resources for their favoured forms of high culture. Arts Council chairman Gerry Robinson confronts Harold Pinter: it is yet another showdown between the men in grey suits and the men in black polo necks."
Leaving aside that this has nothing much to do with Scotland or reality; Christie inferiorises contemporary discussion on art and arts policy to undermine both arts funders and artists from any expectation of autonomy of purpose (which for some is actually the attraction). In fact Christie further engenders the bad faith that only authentic and open debate could possibly counter. 
Although some may close their minds to it, the administrators know government policy is all a load of rubbish too. For Christie the work of both artists and administrators are the problem because "in these debates 'the arts' tend to appear as a distinct world, disconnected from other [government] policy areas." His idea is that all cultural policy must align itself to "sectors which will command funding." Such a polite way of putting it. But we are trying to get out of this cultural gulag not into it.
Arts administrators need to be primarliy aware of the debates within the arts so as to be able to respond. What the government wants has to be counter balanced by what artists want. Or are we to be forever puppets? Administrators should not be led into nor encouraged--as they were with this event--to try to influence and pre-determine debate by political funding exclusions. Their positions are predicated on an independence from government. Traditionally 'think tanks' have played a role in poisoning and tainting this independence. How they fit into power structures must be openly analysed: and bear in mind a conflict of interest is also a potential conflict of interest.
The carrot and stick (the arse and the lick) approach is a sadistic pleasure of control for the psychologically damaged. With the Lottery there is an inordinate surplus of funding available: some £4.4bn which remains unallocated. That this has been atrociously handled (and largely embezzled by government) is one reason why distrust legitimately exists between artists and administrators: the artists know the criteria which is used to exclude them is politically motivated and biased towards spurious government endeavours and incoherent and coercive marketing theories. This is destroying our culture not sustaining it.
Putting every egg in the basket Christie maintains that cultural policy needs to be first joined to government policies (the "modernisation of the fabric of the UK" no less) and then armed with the marketing spin of ever shifting concepts of 'Audience Development', which I imagine will be provided by think tanks and consultants ("policy entrepreneurs") thus creating the Catch-22 loop. This will simplify everything: the "nature of the artistic experience on offer" is inconsequential. Art has no place except as predetermined sanitised "forms of arts enterprise which combine civic spirit with entrepreneurial skills..." We are all welcome to "join up".
The 'evidence' he presents to justify the idea that everything must follow government policy is one source: Geoff Mulgan. A Cabinet Office news release of 1/9/00 announced the appointment of Mulgan as Director of the slightly Orwellian 'Performance and Innovation Unit' (PIU): "The PIU's aim is to improve the capacity of Government to address strategic, cross-cutting issues and to promote innovation in the development and delivery of policy and in the delivery of the Government's objectives. The Unit reports direct to the Prime Minister through Sir Richard Wilson." Previously, the report continued, "Mulgan has worked since 1997 as a Special Adviser to the Prime Minister on social policy issues...responsible for social exclusion, welfare to work, family, urban, voluntary sector and other issues... He was previously the founder and Director of Demos, the independent think tank."
Hey Ian, isn't that where you work? Even a fool would need a bit more than that to take Christie seriously but all he provides is an obscure concluding phrase that "we need a Zeldinist Manifesto."1 This is a reference to Theodore Zeldin a slightly bonkers Oxford academic who writes: 
"I see humanity as a family that has hardly met. I see the meeting of people, bodies, thoughts, emotions or actions as the start of most change. Each link created by a meeting is like a filament, which, if they were all visible, would make the world look as though it is covered with gossamer. Every individual is connected to others, loosely or closely, by a unique combination of filaments, which stretch across the frontiers of space and time."2
That's straight out of Private Eye's 'Pseud's Corner (and I don't like his Open University hair style either), but the 'gossamer filaments' of Christie and Demos' connections are certainly in need of investigation. As with Mulgan's book 'Connexity,' the Amazing Zeldin has found a small niche market with a handful of corporate PR managers on the verge of a nervous breakdown. They use it to justify 'Sustainable Development,' (a propaganda exercise funded by Big Business and government) as a 'Third Way' distraction from the ecological ravages of their Global empires. Aan what do you know, Zeldin is along with Christie and Mulgan, also a core member of Demos.
Christie currently works for the Cabinet Office with Mulgan. For nine years a Fellow of the Policy Studies Institute and the Henley Centre: he's a think tanker's think tanker. He also has his own little organisation 'Green Alliance' (GA). A typical GA pamphlet, by Christie, argues the political case for sustainable development as a rationale for the EU. GA organised the second annual Rio Tinto Environmental and Social Forum, where RTZ company representatives outlined what Rio Tinto has achieved, described a range of initiatives underway and promised to continue constructive engagement in the future. Then presumably went back to dynamiting the rain forest.
GA ran a seminar for William Hague and his environment spokesman Damian Green, on what line they should be punting, then went round the country performing with John Prescott and Micheal Meacher who both spoke at their annual meeting. Not everyone can make money out of turning politics into a middle-man's melange, not everyone sees political commitment and belief as such an opportunity for prostitution.3
Think Tanks such as Demos also pander to the strategies, structures and operating processes of major corporations which are complicit factors in the reduction in the political and economic power of nations. A corollary to this is the ever decreasing ability of governments to meet the needs and expectations of their constituents. The ulterior motive of 'corporate community engagement' is to pirate money from government social management infrastructures which will in the long term eventually abrogates responsibility for social policy to large financial concerns.4 A great deal of this has been rationalised by think tanks as part of a 'Third way' approach. As we will see later the people who run them are becoming adept at obtaining government money through phoney cultural projects.

The Sadistic Statistic
"The Third Way is to my mind the best label for the new politics that the progressive centre-left is forging in Britain and beyond." 
Tony Blair5
And what would a new product be without a label. 'Forging' is an unfortunate choice of words though.
Christie also writes for Prospect--a small magazine desperately pushing the 'Third Way' which aspires to the role played by Encounter in the late 50s. In 'Return to Sociology,' adopting a manner not unlike Senator Joe McCarthy, Christie blames the "1968 generation" for unspecified crimes against sociology.6
'The influence of continental theory grew--and generated a huge amount of posturing, barely exaggerated in Bradbury's lethal portrait of his "history man."'
In Bradbury's novel the History Man is not Howard Kirk (the character played by Anthony Sher in the 82 TV adaptation) but an unseen shadowy figure; but you know what he means. This is after all just more propaganda. The point is to create the illusion that Marxism achieved a monopoly in the sociology curriculum.
Here again he relies on reductive, crude characterisations of the left (while ignoring the right--yes what is right-wing sociology?). The article is a perverse attempt to erase Marxist and left-wing influences (like the Stalinists air-brushing their former comrades out of the picture). He cuts the history of sociology at 1961 and starts it again in 1997 with Demos. The unwanted material is then discarded as he settles down to relentlessly promote his own work and elevate the role of Demos and allied think tanks and consultancies because of their closeness to government. He then depicts them as the logical successor of British Empiricists Lord Young and Peter Willmott, the nice 'establishment' sociologists. The guys who get funding.
Again there are relentless puffs for Geoff Mulgan's book (it would have been nice of Christie to mention that Mulgan helps 'advise' Prospect). Eventually we are guided towards Anthony Giddens the chief salesman (i.e. Tony Blair hired him) of the Third Way. Giddens resembles an old sold-out version of Howard Kirk: he was a Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Leicester from 1961-70. He has never left the Academy and--having climbed the greasy pole at Cambridge from Lecturer, Reader to Professor of Sociology--is now the director of the London School of Economics and Political Science. Once a Marxist sociologist he now advocates that socialism is dead. It's the old "The God That Failed" routine where his mistakes, his failings and sell-outs are attributed and projected onto a failed 'Left'.
Giddens' ideas such as the 'responsible risk taker' grew out of conversations with Mulgan. Together they concocted ill-thought-out concepts for social experimentation on the poor as if they were a bunch of lab rats. What they derived was 'embedded' in the Government's Social Exclusion Unit. Now with the Performance and Innovation Unit there is the development of a desperate propaganda aspect to Mulgan's activities, and as ever it is blowing back in his face.
In 1998 at the direction of the Government, an 'on-line think tank' called Nexus initiated (within 'on-side' academic circles) a series of debates on the Third way, involving Anthony Giddens; David Marquand, Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford (also Demos); Julian Le Grand, Professor of Social Policy at the LSE; and the Directors of the Institute for Public Policy Research and the Fabian Society. The whole sad little gang: but no academic backing was given to the practical meaning or legitimacy of the Third Way.
Nexus was held up as providing a "tested model of how intellectuals, academics, social entrepreneurs and policy experts would assist the development of the public policy of centre-left governments". It soon deteriorated to extinction. One more confirmation of the vacuum in Third Way thinking, and the inability of its proponents to apply its ideas to concrete social realities. 7
But not everyone can make money out of the discussion of poverty. As Christie accidentally admits: "The reform of local government and the welfare state is creating a large demand for information about the preferences of the consumers of public services."8 One of the most blatant hypocritical examples of this 'internal market' being the ERSC/government funded Research Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion (CASE). In its second year in '99 they managed to spend £764,000 on themselves, only producing a couple of books and reports which are overwhelmingly influenced by the work of the Director, John Hills who writes with Geoff Mulgan. The whole point of CASE seems to be to report to Mulgan and tell him what he already knows.9

An accurate picture would be against the national interest old bean
Central to the gang's ideas is the portrayal of both 'Old Left' and 'New Right' as coherent, monotheist political ideologies, this is a convenient myth--but a misleading form of product differentiation. Whether elaborated by Blair, Giddens, Mulgan or Christie, the Third Way is always in search of meaning, presenting concepts awaiting precise definition. But does political expediency actually need or desire intellectual and moral justification? If the Third Way remains a fuzzy undefined concept, there can be no political accountability.
Which is handy because there is no political accountability. The establishment position can't really account for its complicity in the suppression and repression which was targeted at the left in those years Christie wants to so conveniently avoid--none of it is in the history books or the official accounts, most of the relevant information is a secret we are told. The prevailing illusion is that this only happened during the 'Cold War' and that everything now is open. This has gone on so long that a great deal of that suppression and covert compliance with government (and the market ideology) has become internalised and institutionalised within what is passed off as intellectual culture. This is a major problem. A fundamental cultural insecurity.
In the Thatcher years and before, many independent journalists took the influence of think tanks to be a malignant and covert right-wing influence in politics. They realised certain organisations were providing doubtful research to reinforce government/intelligence service's propaganda. Overall this was rarely acknowledged in academia and the papers and TV who were themselves manipulated. In some cases contrary evidence was vociferously kept out of debate by those within institutions who were connected and/or sympathetic in recruiting and training within academia. Paul Wilkinson up in St. Andrews University immediately comes to mind; and he is still providing a service to the budgets of MI5 with his sinister input into loathsome legislation such as the recent 'Terrorism Bill'.
These previous Marxists: Giddens, Mulgan, Demos, despise political activism because they--the 'policy entrepreneurs' as they call themselves--want to dictate policy: why else would they do what they do if they didn't. The 'Third Way' mirrors their own personal sell-outs and biddable political conscience. Put it this way 'Policy entrepreneurs' could easily become Cockney rhyming slang for 'agent-provocateurs'. As we shall see below, they have found a place as agents of influence, joining up with what Anthony Verrier called the 'permanent government.'

Happy ever after in the market place
'Those of us who have observed the resistible rise of the Blairites inside the Labour Party are not in the least surprised by the [the decision to exempt Formula One from the tobacco sponsorship ban]. We expected nothing else from people who routinely broke the rules of their own party, lied about their own actions, smeared fellow Party members, abused Party funds to pursue factional advantage, rigged votes, repeatedly revised policy without consulting any of the Party's democratic organs, and ensured a steady flow of jobs and patronage to those loyal and useful to the leadership. Their attitude to the rules that apply to ordinary people is like Leona Helmsley's towards taxes: they're "for little people".'
http://archive.briefing.org.uk/1997/december/news2.html
Yes times have been good for Demos, it has increased its staff and moved to new offices in Waterloo (let's hope that's ironic) sharing with the MI6 connected Foreign Policy Centre, among others10. Tom Bentley (a former advisor to David Blunkett on education) is now the Director with Beth Egan (advisor to Gordon Brown) as Deputy Director. They still maintain that they are independent from government.
Their web site promotes links to several right-wing think tanks and war mongering arms of the cold war including: The Royal Institute of International Affairs, The RAND Corporation, The International Institute for Strategic Studies, The Hudson Institute (founded by Herman Khan the model for Kubrick's Dr Strangelove), The Heritage Foundation, The Centre for Policy Studies, The Institute of Economic Affairs, The Aspen Institute, The Adam Smith Institute and so on...
Demos trustees bring together mind benders Sir Douglas Hague (former adviser to Margaret Thatcher), Jan Hall (Chief Executive of the advertising agency Gold Greenlees Trott), Martin Jacques (Co-founder of Demos, former editor of Marxism Today, the curiously anti-socialist journal) and Julia Middleton (Chief Executive of Common Purpose).
Geoff Mulgan now chairs the Advisory Council alongside Martin Taylor, who just happens to be a steering group member of the Bilderberg group (a notoriously secretive elite gathering). After his disastrous time at Barclays Bank, Taylor received a £2.5 million payoff (in addition his shares would be worth £3.2 million). A leading member of Labour's taskforce on welfare reform, he is one of the party's prominent supporters in the City. The millionaire immediately targeted the poorest people in the UK with a focus on 'welfare dependency'. Taylor argued that in order to reduce the growing number of workless households, both partners in an unemployed childless couple should have to make themselves available for work. People who get a thrill out of punishing the helpless need help themselves.
Ian Christie is still on the Advisory Council which also has: Matthew D'Ancona (Deputy Editor, The Sunday Telegraph), Terry Leahy (Chief Executive, Tesco plc), Mark Leonard (Director, Foreign Policy Centre), David Marquand (Principal, Mansfield College, Oxford), Anita Roddick (Body Shop plc) and the curiously named 'Perri 6' who is researching into us all being taken over by robots. He has also done extensive research into mind-altering drugs.
It is amazing just how far the Demos team have 'moved on' from their days 'upholding' Marxism to embrace the ideology of the right, any old post-modern cobblers, big business and the shadowy connianvances of think tanks. Demos has spawned all manner of parasitical children. 
Take the example of Common Purpose (CP). This was started by Demos trustee Julia Middleton. It has been around for sometime but gained a great deal of funding with the advent of New Labour and its service towards business elites. Initially money was put in by David Bell, the Chairman of the Financial Times (and the Millennium Bridge Trust). CP is another strange organisation, a kind of secret society for careerists. 
Again the board has some mysterious figures presiding including Lord Dahrendorf, the chairman of the right-wing Ditchley Foundation and Prof. Laurence Martin of the like-minded Royal Institute of International Affairs. It could well be a note paper job, but CP is composed of representatives of big business (mostly Labour party donors) including multi-nationals, the police, the MOD, banks and their associates, eyes down for a Full House:
Gillian Ashmore (Cabinet Office), Sir Jeremy Beecham (Association of Metropolitan Authorities), David Bell (Financial Times), Dr Andrew Bird (Zeneca), Dr Kevin Bond (Yorkshire Water), Jeremy Hall (Dean Clough Ltd), Richard Hatfield (Ministry of Defence), John Lee (Halifax plc), Ruth MacKenzie (ex-Scottish Opera), Vincent McGinlay (Marks & Spencer plc), Baroness Genista McIntosh (Royal National Theatre), Tim Melville-Ross (Institute of Directors), Sir Alastair Morton (Shadow Strategic Railway Authority and British Railways Board), Sir Herman Ouseley (Commission for Racial Equality), Janet Paraskeva (National Lottery Charities Board), Graham Prentice (Nestlé UK Ltd), John Rivers (Rolls-Royce plc), Gerry Robinson (Arts Council of England), Richard Sambrook (BBC), Barry Shaw (Cleveland Constabulary), Jan Shawe (Prudential Corporation plc), Vivien Stern (The International Centre for Prison Studies), Peter Stoddart (Nissan UK Ltd), Paul Whitehouse (Sussex Police), Ken Williams (Norfolk Constabulary), Ruth Wishart (Freelance Journalist).
Their list of corporate sponsors is impressive and they say they have offices in every UK city. Put politely CP tries to promote 'corporate community engagement', the synergy between big business and well... it's a bit like the asbestos factory owner's daughter handing out religious tracts to the workers coughing at the factory gates. Relationships between corporate CP funders such as BAe, Royal Ordinance and GEC Marconi and say the work of CP trustee David Grayson of the national Disability Council are ignored however. The idea is to accentuate the positive.
The real value of CP must be measured by its closeness to power--access to which is what is on offer. The board has only one member who is openly employed by government, Gillian Ashmore, her record speaks for itself:
"Gillian Ashmore is currently on secondment from the Department of Transport to the British Railways Board working on railway privatisation. She joined the Civil Service in 1971 and has worked variously in the Departments of the Environment, Transport, Employment and Trade and Industry. On the Transport side, she has worked mainly in the public transport field. In the latter two Departments she was Deputy Director of the Enterprise and Deregulation Unit. Mrs. Ashmore has also been a non-executive director of P & O European Transport." 11
Incredibly with a line up like that the CP constitution has the cheek to say the organisation: 
"is diverse and non-aligned. It draws on the widest possible variety of sectors, areas, and social groups and recognises only peer level and geographical boundaries as common factors to each group. It is always independent, always balanced and owes no historical or other allegiance to any other organisation. Common Purpose works for the benefit of society as a whole..."12
What a pack of lies. CP creates the illusion that it is for ordinary people, but it is not only run by an elite, its projects cater exclusively for an elite: "the rising generation of decision makers" as they say in their web site. This also states that: "We are looking for applicants who are decision-makers in their city, towns or area", and that "participants are over 30 and already hold a position of considerable responsibility". They say their long-term aim is "educating the next generation of leaders in each city or town". On this basis it is a fraudulent organisation.
Funded by big business and public bodies (everyone from Arms companies, Banks to curiously the Scottish Arts Council--probably through Ruth Wishart's connection) they operate for their benefit while their constitution lies that they seek "the advancement of education for the public benefit... to educate men and women from a broad range of geographical, political, ethnic, institutional, social and economic backgrounds."

We have mourned and you have not wept
With Trustees such as Gerry Robinson, the ex-Coca Cola salesman who is now chairman of the Arts Council of England and Janet Paraskeva, the director of the National Lotteries Charities Board (the 'independent organisation' which distributes National Lottery money supposedly to charities and community groups')13 CP has specialised in channelling money away from genuine charitable causes. Demos is also partially funded directly via the Arts Council/Lottery 'New Opportunities Fund'.
The illusion of independence from funders and government was abandoned with CP's biggest project, 'Citizen's Connection'. Tony Blair's old flat mate Lord Falconer's New Millennium Experience Company (NMEC) said that: "Camelot, NMEC and Common Purpose created...Citizens Connection."14
But the legal position of the Camelot Group plc is that as the operator of the UK National Lottery it is supposed to be "not responsible for the allocation of funds raised". Except when it is. 
The NMEC was (is?) an extraordinary concoction. According to their press release the 'NMEC is a non-Departmental Public Body and a company, independent from government with one shareholder, Lord Falconer'. This makes it an Anstalt a finacial vehicle more commonly associated with Swiss Bank accounts and money laundering. The 'off-shore account' was pioneered by the Mafia: their Lotteries ('the numbers racket') were deemed illegal because of the evidence that they preyed upon the poor--the National Lottery magically does the reverse.
NMEC is funded by the National Lottery via the Millennium Commission (who tried to be independent from government but were threatened with a judicial review). NMEC ran the Dome and a National Programme of events across the UK. It is misleading to gather all this up as the problem with 'the Dome'. For instance, Labour MP Robert Marshall-Andrews tabled a Commons question on numerous secret contracts worth some £450 million--awarded by the NMEC, 'a company with no direct lines of information or accountability'.
But with millions pouring down the drain (well into a few people's pockets) an attempted diamond heist and daily financial craziness at the Dome, no one really noticed anything unusual when Camelot, whoever runs Common Purpose and Lord Falconer gave £2 million to Common Purpose to run a web site which links to the governments' sites, which is all Citizen's Connection is. 
Amusingly an exactly similar organisation to 'Citizen's Connection' already existed with Lord Young's School for Social Entrepreneurs, which is funded by HSBC, the National Lottery and a peculiar 'charity' the Esmee Fairbairn Charitable Trust, run by the wife of the former chairman of the SAC, Magnus Linklater.
People have to pay to join up for any CP programme, so who is this money going to? Just about all of CP projects are extensions of PR exercises run by big companies, such as the 'Your Turn' project, which was directly run by BT's PR consultants, so effectively these are being underwritten. Yet--even while CP got millions for their web site--'Your Turn' was specifically given additional funding by the National Lottery Charities Board, which as we have seen with CP board member, Janet Paraskeva has a conflict of interest, which she regards as a common purpose and her turn for some money.

Manufactured, twisted...ever more tenuous
"We now live in a world in which fantasy and reality are hard if not impossible to distinguish. Information is the raw material of both fact and fantasy, and has been so industrialised that its origins are rarely visible. Now it can be manufactured, twisted, multiplied and disseminated almost without limit. Assisted by the power of computing, it can be created as if from nothing: tailor made to cognitive needs, put together as pastiche or copy. It needs only minimal reference points. The links between it and an objective reality--the claim of positivism and enlightenment--are ever more tenuous. As a result for the receiver there are few grounds for judgement, apart from received authority or limited experience."15
This con artist's confession was written by Geoff Mulgan a few years ago, when he was em...a lefty Sociology lecturer in Sheffield University. You can just smell the post-modernism: confusing fantasy with reality, providing text by the yard. There was only one place for the young Geoff to go: Think Tank Land--the Thought Police--the place where the government pay you to fuck with people's minds. From there Geoff's 'limited experience' (and how he limits others), and his strange fantasies became confused with reality, in first the Social Exclusion Unit, then enforcing these policies in the Performance & Innovation Unit. Mulgan's desk is where all this bureaucracy begins which we see filtering into arts policy (Ian Christie's work) and the administration of the poor. 
The type of post-modernist theory expressed by entrepreneurial proponents of the Third Way such as Mulgan, has its roots in the work of Martin Jacques, the founder of Demos who recruited Mulgan. 
Jaques pushed the importance of interpreting ideology as no more than the job of gaining the consent of the dominant class. The relations of production, exploitation and the desire for power, impunity and privilege at the heart of the system were overlooked. The market (and its effects) as a structured system of relationships and values escaped their critique. This delineated only free relations of 'exchange' between individuals in the market as consumers.
The early 80s attack of the new conservatives and monetarists on social democratic capitalism together with the collapse of the soviet system gave the market and its values a new prominence for Jacques. Together with the sociologist Stuart Hall they produced political critiques--particularly in the journal 'New Times'--of the new right and are associated with coining the phrase 'Thatcherism'. Critics believe these overestimated its ideological and political coherence and its success in reforming the machinery of state and in capturing public opinion:
"Because Thatcherism had a 'project', it was concluded that the left needed one too. This, it was argued meant a long and difficult reform of the left on the 'hard road to renewal'. But the results of this in 'New Times' and 'post-fordism' involved the jettisoning of many of the critical analyses of left thought."16
So with the pseudo-sociology of the 'policy entrepreneur', with this wilful ignorance in exchange for money, we have a social thought which has moved far away from examining the actual conditions of the society in which we live:
"...at a time of widespread disenchantment or retreat on the intellectual left when theory itself had abandoned the ground of oppositional critique and assumed the role of a legitimising discourse with every motive for dissimulating its own material interests and conditions of emergence. In which case we would do better to drop all the glitzy self-promoting talk of 'post-modernism', 'New Times' etc., talk whose sole function--whether wittingly or not--is to offer an escape-route or convenient alibi for thinkers with a large (if unacknowledged) stake in the 'cultural logic of late capitalism.'"17
It is impossible now with Demos--employed by New Labour in much the same capacity as the Thatcher government employed the Adam Smith Institute and the IEA--to believe that they are unwitting. The connections and services to organisations such as the Bilderberg, Ditchley, Royal Institute for International Affairs etc. represents their connivance with elite gatherings of business interests unfettered by the democratic process. They are part of the laissez passer in the laissez faire.18

Its no go the Demos Man...
The SAC may still promote the mad logic that we will gain independence by abdicating it: but you will only hear this sort of thing from people who are paid to say it or who want to be: paid by government as part of the exercise of control, not public service. However you define Scottish culture it is dangerously destructive to see it as a process of enforcing a diseased mentality contracted from a Downing Street 'policy entrepreneur'.
This is ignored, but Scottish culture is self-determined here in Scotland and it will always seek freedom. Part of actually realising that freedom will be a redress of balance, an acknowledgement of the areas of culture which are ignored and suppressed, deemed 'too political,' because they challenge the assumptions of the power structure which presently has control of the financial resources. The present power structure maintains class hierarchies whereby selected members of the middle class once suitably 'educated' into appreciating and administering 'high culture', then become eradicators of certain forms of culture, denigrating the nascent and indigenous culture. 
Everyone's had enough of it. It simply doesn't work.
Many of those in our areas of higher education, mainstream media, those administrating culture and the majority of artists will have to make themselves aware about what really happened in Scottish culture in the last 20 years because there is no real record. The level of cultural debate is atrociously non-existent--the example the SAC set with Ian Christie is a disgrace, really quite repulsive. It puts us back to the position of intellectual openness of Czechoslovakia in the 1960s--instead of tanks rolling in it is think tanks. It makes no difference to me if I am considered a dissident for saying so.
Where are arts and cultural policy analysed intelligently? Why was Ian Christie paid to perpetuate this stage managed fraud by the two Stepford Wives of the SAC and Glasgow City Council? 
Centralised devolution for all is now on offer across the country. A national network of Commisars. But the fact is that the Arts Council are losing the support of even their own committee members. Those with any integrity are blackmailed or put into corners, doubling up on their jobs, shortening their lives with the stress of competing in this phoney market place. The internal market becomes internalised market values--pretend partnerships where the mentor becomes the tormentor. There will never be a shortage of money for government stooges like Ian Christie and his like, those who advocate that we maintain in ignorance of the relevance of our own culture. I'd love to sell my soul myself, but they think I'm the Devil.

notes
1. Zeldin is studying 'Happiness' at the moment in Oxford.
2. (Quoted from Zeldin's 'An Intimate History of Humanity' from a review by Sean McWilliams)
3. http://www.green-alliance.org.uk/Documents/Newsletters/InsideTrack_Highlights_Autumn1999.pdf. GA together with the Fabian Society and the Royal Institute for International Affairs published Peter Hain's 'The End of Foreign Policy.' Mulgan and Christie are also involved in Green Futures magazine.
4. A New Model for "Corporate Philanthropy" by Ron Burke, General Manager, Global Corporate Relations, National Australia Bank, First published Family Matters, No. 51 Spring/Summer 1998 sets out Zeldin's influence.
5. Quoted from http://www.prospect.org/print-friendly/print/V10/45/klein-r.html
6. Prospect, January 1999 http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/highlights/return_sociology/index.html. Prospect is modelled on the American prospect founded by Daniel Bell in the USA. The Prospect editor, David Goodhart is an ardent admirer. Laughably it presents Demos, (Mulgan, Martin Jaques) as the opponents of the government.
7. Geoff Andrews 'Technocrats or Intellectuals?' http://www.signsofthetimes.org.uk/pamphlet1/techno.html
Third Way Debate Summary can be found at http://www.netnexus.org/library/papers/3way.html. Their own figures say that it got 140 postings by 45 people.
8. Quote from Christie Prospect op cit.
9. http://sticerd.lse.ac.uk/dps/casepdfs/casereports/CASEreport6.pdf. See also the Bob Holman interview in this issue. "CASE subsumes the former LSE Welfare State program" with additional support coming from "the Suntory and Toyota International Centres for economics and Related Disciplines, including for the Centre's Toyota Research Officer."
10. Together with the Foriegn Policy Centre, Demos shares its address: The Mezzanine, Elizabeth House, 39 York Road, London SE1 7NQ, with a number of organisations which grew out of it or are government fronts or who are funded to run Mulgan's Social Exclusion policies: The Family Education Trust, 'TS2k', CIVITAS (a former IEA venture), the Community Action Network (funded by BNFL and Coca Cola and the Home Office, a revolting cocktail), the Carnegie Young People Initiative, Timebank, UNLTD, the Foundation for Social Entrepreneurs and the Policy Network. These organisations mostly form a stable of volunteer organisations who provide individuals to (domestic and foreign) NGOs under the same roof as an MI6 front and Mulgan and Taylor's operation for the Cabinet Office.
11. (http://www.parliament.the-stationery-office.co.uk/pa/cm199394/cmhansrd/1994-02-08/Writtens-4.html)
12. http://www.commonpurpose.org.uk/Public/jobs/pforum.htm. Barclays also sponsored Common Purpose's Alchemist Awards to various friends including the Founders of Jubilee 2000 which aims to ask the banks to abandon third world debts.
13. Which recently shiftily changed its name to the 'Community Fund'. Monopoly anyone?
14. http://www.camelotplc.com/press/archive/pressreleases/pressczclaunc.asp
15. http://www.shef.ac.uk/~perc/Polpaps/MULGAN.pdf.
16. Greg Philo & David Miller, Cultural Compliance , Glasgow Media Group Glasgow June 1998. I would also recommend their 'Market Killing', pictured opposite.
17. C. Norris Reclaiming the Truth: Contribution to a Critique of Cultural Relativism, London Lawrence & Wishart. Quoted from the above.
18. Mulgan gave a briefing to the Ditchley Foundation in Florence on 19-21 November 1999 on the 'Third Way.' The Director of Communications of the Council on Foreign Relations was also in attendance together with various 'diplomats' and Sir Samuel Brittan Principal economics commentator, The Financial Times. 

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The Iron Chancellor
Robin Ramsay

New Labour leaders think of themselves as pragmatists though they don't use the word: within Labour Party discourse it is contaminated by its association with Harold Wilson. 'We are interested in whatever works', says Tony Blair, 'We are beyond ideology'. And a tiny sliver of the British left wonders if Blair knows that 'beyond ideology' was one of the key slogans in the CIA's psychological warfare efforts to prevent socialism in Europe after WW2.
In the 1950s the appeal of the theory behind 'beyond ideology' was obvious. Europe had been wrecked by the war; the US was producing about half the world's GDP in 1950. How wonderful the East Coast of the US must have seemed to the streams of Labour politicians taking the American government-funded trips across the Atlantic then! And everywhere they went they heard the same message: it is the end of ideology. Capitalism - American production methods - had cracked it. Redistribution - fuddy-duddy old socialism - would not be necessary to solve the problems of the world. No more class struggle. No more conflict. A rising tide floats all the boats.
Now we are being governed by another group of America fans. Some of them, Blair and Brown for example, have been on the US freebie and bought the story - no-one more enthusiastically than Gordon Brown who has been visiting nice, white, civilised New England - home of Yale and Harvard - since he was in opposition. He had his honeymoon there in a cottage at Nantucket.
It is one of the clichés of the age that New Labour are the masters of spin. Gordon Brown is rarely mentioned in the tales of spin doctors. The self-styled 'iron chancellor', restoring prudence to the finances of the country, Brown is presented as above that petty political stuff. But if anyone can claim to be the master of spin it is Brown. For despite a decade of first espousing and then implementing the age-old economic policies of the banking world at home, and more recently striding the world stage as the advocate of the virtues of American-style capitalism (aka globalisation), Brown is still perceived by many as somehow a more left-wing figure than Blair.
This perception is extremely odd for Brown's career in opposition as Shadow Chancellor was a long courtship of multi-national capital and, advised by figures from the City, the ditching of 'old Labour' national economy and manufacturing-oriented, policies.
Of course Brown wouldn't see it this way. He would see his intellectual trajectory since the late 1980s as simply facing up to the reality of the power of the markets and the impotence of the nation state before them. And if asked for an example Brown, I'm sure, would quote the event which really got Labour elected in 1997 - Black Wednesday, the ERM fiasco of 1992 which destroyed the Conservative Party's claim to be the party of economic competence.
But Brown learned the wrong lesson from those events. What being forced out of the ERM showed was that it was impossible to sustain an overvalued currency. Nothing new here; the only difference between this and other sterling crises before it was the scale of speculative onslaught and the speed with which events unfolded. No matter: like John Smith, Brown drew the conclusion that to get elected Labour had to do the bidding of multi-national capital - 'the markets'.
By the time Labour took office Brown and Blair had promised to toe the conservative (and Conservative) line on economic policy: no income tax rises, no increased public spending, no attempts to use government to direct the economy; and no renationalisation. They had learned the mantra: private good, public bad.
Taking office in 1997, there was only one tool left in the new Chancellor's hands but it was the critical one: the control of interest rates. Interest rates influence the domestic economy directly - think of Mrs Thatcher's great recession of 1980-83 caused by high interest rates - and via their impact on the exchange rate: high pound, imports cost less; exports cost more. This last, essential lever, was duly surrendered to the Bank of England on Brown's first day in office. He couldn't wait to show willing. And so - absurdly, incredibly - Labour set out, like Mrs Thatcher in the early 1980s, to run the British economy with neither an interest rate policy nor an exchange rate policy: these would be left to the Bank of England who would use interest rates solely to control inflation. Cue an over-valued pound and another wave of manufacturing closures.
Brown was carefully shepherded into the views he now holds. In the decade before becoming Chancellor, his personal office was managed by Sue Nye , the wife of Gavyn Davies, a partner in the US multi-national bank, Goldman Sachs. The late John Smith, when Labour leader, took him to the heart of the globalising lobby, the secretive Bilderberg group. Unknown to his party, his colleagues, or his biographer, Andy McSmith, John Smith had been on the Bilderberg inner circle, the steering committee. It was thus not surprising that when Brown, qua Shadow Chancellor, chose someone to give him economic advice he picked Ed Balls, leader writer at The Economist, the leading British advocate of globalisation. (Two writers at The Economist are the so-called rapporteurs - i.e. minute-takers - for Bilderberg.) It was Balls who arranged meetings with government economists in America in 1993 when Brown and Blair visited the Democrats.
'Whatever works' say New Labour; but it's a lie. They are not interested in anything happening on mainland Europe. If they were they would be studying Holland, Denmark, Sweden for social policies; virtually any of the EU countries for how to run a railway; France for its health care system; Germany for how to be a middle ranking power without much of an army or intelligence service; Portugal, Ireland, Italy or Spain for how to get EU money without implementing its more ridiculous legislation. None of this is happening. 'Whatever works' actually means 'whatever the Americans are doing'. Matthew d'Ancona in the Sunday Telegraph reported on January 14: '[Brown's] preoccupation with best practice across the Atlantic is all-consuming: one Cabinet minister told me that 'the only sure way to get Gordon to listen to a policy idea is to produce an American who believes in it.'
Brown looks at the vast, mineral-rich, largely empty continent of America and sees things we should copy here on this over-crowded island. He apparently doesn't see the 3 million in jail, the 25,000 gunshot deaths every year, the hundreds of thousands living on the streets, the most obnoxious foreign policy since Joseph Stalin and the most corrupt political system since Britain in the days of the 'rotten boroughs' in the 18th century.
Most of all Gordon Brown is naive. He believes that the multinational drug companies are just itching to sell their products at cost price to the Third World. He believes that the West's bankers are willing to write off the debts owed them by the Third World. He believes that the British bankers feel duty bound to invest in the infrastructure of Britain.
None of these beliefs are true. And in pursuing them Brown looks foolish. He has had it easy so far but the American recession just beginning will create unemployment over here as the multinationals start cutting-back. We may then discover if Gordon Brown is to be remembered as anything more than the last dribble of Thatcherism down the leg of British politics.

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Remembrances of things past
Louise Crawford

The hum of super 8mm and 16mm projectors, the bodies and places that populate their images have become ghosts of a nostalgic past, a paradise lost, associated with the birth of photography, photograms and the flickering light burning through last century's celluloid. The baby in the Lumiere Brothers' Le Petit Gout de Bebe was the blueprint for all our home movie memories to follow and the leaves rustling in the wind behind the baby which so fascinated Melies would fascinate all potential filmmakers thereafter.
Super 8mm and 16mm have for some time been released of their function, reduced in the broadcast media and advertising world to a marketable and usable style quality where scratches and dust are acceptable as long as they are artificially created and suitably sanitised. Video has now replaced super 8mm in the creation of home movies and popular travelogues. Kodak has now brought onto the market super 8mm negative, not for the reason of making several copies from a master negative--the super 8mm enthusiasts dream--but in order to transfer direct onto video for home editing on the computer.
Super 8mm home movies are now in the public domain, their time honoured function is up and they now are material for artists, TV and music companies to exploit. The developments in video, new media and digital technology now liberate traditional forms from their functionality and industry-orientated constraints.
For many of us super 8mm was the first step in representing the moving image, its versatility and simplicity captured the imagination of many art students, experimental and independent filmmakers and film groups. With the advent of television and mass media in the 1960s and 70s artists discovered anew (after the experimentation of the 20s and 30s) the plasticity and possibilities of film. Then in the 80s, 16mm film was relieved of its educational and 'light industrial' function, helping it achieve its fully 'liberated position' as a creative art form. But now the post-production processes are disappearing, 16mm editing tables gather dust in workshops, television studios and schools and 16mm labs are closing down. The creation and post-production process that began with the birth of cinema itself, marking the beginning of experimental film history in the 20s and 30s has been undergoing a gradual change. Cutting of film is rapidly becoming a thing of the past as celluloid is now transcribed and digitised, becoming numbered data interchangeable with sound and text that ultimately influences the editing process. 16mm film is a dinosaur in its last death throws, on the verge of extinction and obsolescence, the specificity of its medium threatened.
So why is there so much film work present in galleries and museums?
Those who continue with super 8 and 16mm film will be the experimental and independent filmmakers who see themselves within a specific historical lineage and artists who are always re-inventing new ways of seeing. Abel Gance brought us multi-screen projection too early, too ahead of its time. Out of the birth of cinema grew an experimental form of cinema. The birth of video also temporarily gave us new forms of experimentation with the medium. It is these high points of experimentation which are being rediscovered and reconsidered today. Those who choose to work with 16mm film will persist with Steenbecks at home: self-sufficient filmmakers who retain control over their material, those who want to continue to work with the tactile nature of film and with those who want to continue to sculpt in time.
Filmmaking that exists on the margins retains a kind of constant marginality, a stability on the edge. It finds itself a position of opposition and learns how to operate from this position of survival. This nucleus of activity sometimes moves closer to and sometimes farther away from the activity of its parallel universe and at times the paths of players from each side cross over into the other camp. The border-line between what constitutes art and what constitutes film is being broken down partly due to the prevalence of video/moving image present in gallery spaces.
With these thoughts in mind I would like to discuss four exhibitions I have seen this year. The first: an exhibition where an artist working with film has made inroads into the gallery system and art world. The other three are filmmakers associated with more marginal and experimental practices showing their work in gallery spaces.
In spring of this year Tacita Dean presented seven film installations in her solo exhibition at the Tate Gallery in London. All of the them had their own sound-proofed spaces and all worked with a straight forward, classical frontal projection. In six of the spaces a loop system was set up for continuous viewing. Dean's installations are minimal in the way they intervene with the space. The film is projected onto a wall, at times filling the full wall, at times occupying a centre space. The spectator can either stand or sit according to whether a bench is available. The arrangement of these varying viewing spaces where one can pass from one film into another make the spectator the interactive component in a medium that does not normally lend itself to interruption, repetition or spectator control. As well as making us aware of the gallery context, this passing from one space into another helps us relate one film to another, giving us an enhanced understanding of the artist's approach. Dean's images are well composed and considered, with their own sense of pace and rhythm. Her images and subject matter paired down to a minimum giving the work clarity and simplicity. Her approach is akin to that of documentary in the treatment and research into her subject matter but unlike most documentaries is devoid of commentary, voice-over or text. The images speak for themselves.
The documentary genre is becoming increasingly popular as it crosses over into fine art territory with artists producing experimental documentaries and approaching documentary in unconventional ways. Galleries and museums appear to be willing to accommodate such work because it deals with recognisable subject matter that is accessible and understandable for the viewer while still retaining a bold artist's signature.
Matthias Müller is a well-known filmmaker on the independent/experimental film scene. His work is toured internationally by the Goethe Institute. Müller's former work borrowed from, analyses and deconstructs Hollywood narrative structures. It is beautifully shot and well constructed. In Home Stories, an early film work, Müller, sampled scenes from typical melodramas. Varying scenes from films showing women entering and leaving rooms, switching on and off lamps, anxiety, fear and apprehension on their faces were edited together, exposing and in so doing, deconstructing the repetitive formula of Hollywood narrative structures.
Müller's most recent film Vacancy was shown at an exhibition at the Royal College of Art in London playing amongst the ruins, organised by the students of the RCA curating course. Vacany was filmed in Brasilia, Oscar Niemeyer & Lucio Costa's utopian city built from scratch in 1961, the year of Müller's birth. Mixing his own images of the city with found footage and archive material, he unearths a strong poetic portrait of the hopes and subsequent demise of a utopian dream and the ruination and degradation of a modern utopia. Historical images of the pristine city dissolve into shots of a crumbling contemporary Brasilia. Present day footage is treated in such a way that the distinction between what is archive footage from the 60s and what is contemporary footage is totally blurred. A voice over accompanies us through these strange and beautifully composed cityscapes with texts from Italo Calvino, Samuel Beckett, David Wojnarowicz and Müller himself. The film moves into documentary territory then pulls out as Müller's subjective poetic vision begins to refer not only to the past and present of a utopian city but to his own life.
This is the first time I have seen Müller's work in a gallery. This film would seem to have been chosen for its suitability to the theme of the exhibition, (other works in this show included Martha Rosler's How do we know what home looks like shot in Le Corbusier's L'Unité d'Habitation at Firminy-Vert and Sarah Morris' film Midtown shot in New York). But Vacancy works well in a gallery space and it is easy to imagine these images in other larger spaces where the spectator can physically engage with the projected images of Brasilia past and present. The spectators' physical presence becomes an architectural component and human reference in Müller's filmic representation of this modern city.

Yann Beauvais has been making experimental films since the 1970s. He is co-founder of Lightcone Distribution Co-operative in Paris (distribution and archive of experimental film) and programmer of Scratch Projection, a weekly screening of experimental cinema in Paris. At C.R.E.D.A.C. Centre d'Art contemporain d'Ivry just outside Paris. Beauvais presented a complex and compelling film installation titled 'Des Rives'. Typically French in its play on words, des rives meaning river banks and dérives meaning to wander in the city with no particular aim or reason.
Des Rives comprised of two screens set at a 120° angle making the spectator the third point in a three dimensional virtual space. Like a large fan opened out, moving images of New York passed horizontally across vertical strips creating a surface pattern like windscreen wipers moving back and forward across the screen. The panoramic scenes and tracking shots of New York, the layering of images and the slow-moving zoom kept the viewers gaze in motion and unstable, constantly shifting between construction, analysis and collapse. At times our eyes would focus upon one cut-up New York urban landscape before shifting to another urban scene, the foreground becoming the background and vice versa. The image has no centre, no sides, we are neither guided by a linear narrative or chronological editing. As the films repeat themselves through the use of a loop system we begin to recognise and familiarise ourselves with a taxi, a street scene, a corner but never enough to fully identify with it. 
The sound accompanying the installation created by Thomas Köner is not intended to make the images more realistic but to make the space more real. Köner states that it is impossible for sound and image to interact totally because they assume different dimensions. This collaboration created a merging of two different audiences, the experimental film one and the electronic music one. Historically these two fields have much-in-common and it was inspiring to witness their coming together and fusing on equal terms. Beauvais' film installation in a gallery context brought together in a positive way the three different strands of film, art and music and the intertwining of their past histories and present developments.
At the Centre National de la Photographie in Paris were the filmmakers Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet, a formidable couple working with 35mm. They have been active since the 60's and were part of the initial energy and vibrancy of the Nouvelle Vague. Refusing to participate in the Algerian war, Straub was treated as a deserter and facing imprisonment in France left for Germany. Current debate in the French press on the use of torture during the Algerian war has revealed Jean-Marie Straub's political position at that time, which was to have a negative effect on his cinema career in France.
The films of Straub and Huillet are rigorous and their continuing vision is exceptional. They fit into no camp, their work is difficult and unique, it demands time, attention, patience and a new way of thinking of cinema, their work is totally unconventional. They challenge and upset cinema, their engagement with it is artistic and political. There is an economy in the organisation of audio and visual space, each scene is rigorously constructed and articulated, each event leaves the spectator free to interpret, to make his/her own decisions. Their films never leave you indifferent. For this very reason, Straub & Huillet are often at their screenings to discuss their work afterwards. Showing their films at the CNP was problematic for two reasons. Ink jet prints of film stills, texts and diagrams occupying the gallery spaces were a superfluous and unnecessary attempt to justify their presence. No justification was needed. Secondly their films, although shown in a cinema-like space with adequate projection and seating facilities lacked the collective cinema experience of being in an audience where the possibility of dialogue afterwards would add to that experience. (This situation did take place over a weekend where screenings were programmed). Art galleries diffuse collective experience emphasising instead our individual responses.
Yann Beauvais and Straub & Huillet's work is a cinema of resistance, a political engagement, a combat. The question of film and cinema is for them an integral part of the work itself. Tacita Dean's uses film as a painter uses paint and Matthias Müller's recent work is fittingly elegiac in spirit.
As we rush headlong into the techno-scientific world of industrial and post-industrial capitalism with its meticulous programming and fabrication of beautiful images perhaps there is a need to re-position ourselves before we take the giant leap forward. 

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I am not not-innocent
James Kelman

A favourite request from students about my last novel is that I explain how I could write from the perspective of a man who was blind, if I had never been blind myself. I tell them the more difficult task, given I have never been imprisoned, is to convey the central character's past experience of 11 years' confinement. In the novel the prisoner committed the crimes of which he had been convicted and had no particular sense of injustice. If he had been wrongly convicted and imprisoned the novel would have altered significantly. Had the character been "set-up" for murder by the police and with the collusion of other authorities then the experience would have been overwhelming.
How do people cope with that? Not only the victims and their families but the families of the people murdered. This is the situation faced by who knows how many people. The notoriety of certain miscarriages of justice can lead to an association with the place the event occurred; the Birmingham Six and Guildford Four; the Tottenham Three, the Winchester Three, Cardiff Three, Gloucester Three. In any such miscarriage there is the crucial issue of the identity of the true killers. If wrongfully convicted and imprisoned men finally are cleared and released from prison what chance is there of the real murderers ever being found? Why in many cases are the police, prosecution service and Home Office authorities content to allow the real criminals to walk free? With adequate investigation many of these blatant miscarriages of justice cannot help but reveal additional truths.
The recent release of the M25 Three with the disclaimer by the judicial authority that this "was not a finding of innocence, far from it" is reminiscent of the acquittal of the Winchester Three back in 1990 when Lord Denning "stated publicly that [the three men] were released on a legal technicality and implied that they were in fact guilty." Later on Lord Denning withdrew the comment.1 This has yet to occur in the case of the M25 Three. Until then, if the three men are not-innocent will any attempt be made to discover the actual killer, whoever is not not-innocent but not not-guilty? It so happens that the three men now released from prison are black and, according to one eye-witness, at least two of the three guilty parties were white.
In so many of these cases of racist violence there seems to be a need on the part of the authorities to deny the very possibility of racist motivation. Because of that crimes are said not to be crimes and criminals escape, murderers are free to seek out more victims. A murder itself becomes not a murder, perhaps it was manslaughter, drug and/or alcohol-fuelled, perhaps a robbery gone wrong. Perhaps no third party was involved at all, you never know, maybe it was an unusual form of suicide, or freak accident. One case from October 1997 was that of Lakhvinder Reel "who disappeared for almost a week before his drowned body was found in the River Thames." His death "was quickly described as accidental by local police." Later evidence reveals that the young man "and his friends had been attacked by racists shortly before his disappearance." The last time "he was seen alive" was when he "and his friends ran off in different directions." 
In this context also2 are the deaths of Harold McGowan and six months later his nephew Jason. Both were found hanged. Earlier Harold had been "pursued around Telford, abused, taunted and threatened by members of a racist gang that has been linked to Combat 18." His family was not satisfied by the outcome of the police investigation and his nephew Jason began making his own investigations. Eventually he "began to receive death threats." Eventually he too was found hanged. Eventually the police also gave a verdict of suicide, given that "the railings were so low [Jason] would have had to kneel to kill himself."
It seems extraordinary that the police can try to get away with making a judgement so devoid of ordinary common sense. But what leads them to try such a thing in the first place? The McGowan family "lodged a complaint with the Police Complaints Authority...claiming that West Mercia police failed to investigate his death adequately because of racism and that they treated the family poorly." The family argued that the police "made an assumption of suicide and failed to investigate the possibility of murder, losing valuable forensic evidence [and] their doubts are supported by [the] independent pathologist" who conducted a post-mortem examination of Jason's body. Following a campaign by the McGowan family, supported by the National Civil Rights Movement, "the head of Scotland Yard's race and violent crimes task force [has] led a new investigation." He has stated publicly that "that the deaths made him 'uneasy, worried and frightened.'"3
In November 1999 the inquest was held into the death of Lakhvinder Reel and the jury returned "an open verdict based on a lack of evidence, [which] not only contradicted police claims of an accidental death but also upheld the claims of [his] family and friends on the 'seriously flawed' original police investigation." The London Metropolitan police refused 'to allow a Police Complaints Authority report in evidence which also condemned the first police investigation.'4 In view of their catalogue of shame in relation to racist violation it is surprising the police are allowed to get away with this sort of move. However, given that individual policemen occasionally get away with murder too much surprise only indicates naivety.
There is also the issue of cash compensation, damages and liability. So long as the judicial authorities deny their innocence the victims of injustice will have an uphill struggle to receive any financial compensation. What do people in the situation of the so-called M25 Three do to establish their right to adequate compensation? Do they have to deny their guilt? 
If they are required to demonstrate their innocence must they conduct their own investigation into the crime, establish their whereabouts at the time, and whatever else it takes to rule themselves out of the equation? Of course conducting their own criminal investigation would be consistent with what happens to many black people in crimes where they or their families are the victims of racist violence. This is what happen in campaigns such as that of the Stephen Lawrence family. 
One member of the M25 three, Raphael Rowe already has been awarded compensation but for another claim. It was settled a month before the ruling by the European Court of Human Rights that he "and Michael Davis had been denied a fair trial because the prosecution had withheld important evidence under public interest immunity (pii) rules."5 The "undisclosed damages" were against the Prison Service "in compensation for a brutal assault by prison officers in 1993...after being repeatedly kicked and punched...and called a 'murdering black bastard.'" The violence took place in Wormwood Scrubs, now notorious for its "systematic abuse, frequent racial abuse and intimidation of inmates." "The Inspector of Prisons published a report which condemned the...'evil' and 'rotten' prison" and prison officers have now been charged with "racist abuse and assaulting inmates." Even the female lawyer acting on behalf of some of the prisoners has been harassed by prison officers while engaged in her work inside the prison.
Almost without exception in cases where compensation is paid to victims of police violence liability is never admitted. Between 1986 and 1997 £20 million was paid out by the public on behalf of the Metropolitan Police "in compensation and costs." But the overall 'cost of injustice' to the tax-payer is really colossal. When Winston Silcott, one of the original Tottenham Three, was awarded £50,000 in an "out of court settlement...for his wrongful conviction for the murder of PC Keith Blakelock" another £500,000 went towards legal costs. In addition to that policemen involved in wrongdoing and unlawful activities may "retire on medical grounds to avoid allegations of corruption and malpractice: between 1995-96 more than 70% of Metropolitan police officers under investigation, or facing disciplinary charges, retired on medical grounds...[costing] some £330 million a year." 
Winston Silcott's "conviction was quashed" when electrostatic document analysis "tests on his 'admissions' interview had established that pages had been rewritten and that officers, notably Detective Chief Superintendent Melvin, had lied when describing the notes of the interview as 'contemporaenous.'"6 DCS Melvin was "one of the most senior operational police officers in Britain's largest force during the biggest investigation it has ever carried out..."7 Later on he and colleague "Detective Inspector Maxwell Dingle were found not guilty...of charges involving conspiracy to pervert the course of justice and perjury.8
What must it be like for the families of the dead who have to come to terms with the fact that the real killers are walking free and nobody is doing anything about it? This horrible sense of wrong and injustice came to the fore in a quite sad manner when the family of Keith Blakelock sued Winston Silcott. But after the shocking campaign of vilification and its ill-concealed racism, conducted against Mr Silcott by sections of the media it was hardly surprising that people would refuse to accept the possibility that he could be other than not-innocent.
It is sometimes forgotten that the tragic events at Broadwater Farm derived from the death of a black woman, Cynthia Jarret, and the treatment meted out to her family. It began because her son had the cheek to drive a flash car. The police stopped the young man in his BMW. Although they soon discovered that "car and occupant were in order" they managed to find a minor discrepancy that allowed them to arrest him, and they did so, "for theft of a motor vehicle." And while he was locked up they took his keys and used them to enter the family home in search of any kind of evidence that they might use against him, and in the process were responsible for the death of his mother. According to her daughter Patricia, one of the policemen knocked against Cynthia Jarret, causing her to fall, and from that she suffered a fatal heart attack.
Nobody knows how many miscarriages of justice continue to blight the judicial systems of the United Kingdom. Racism is so often at the root but elitism and class prejudice are the primary factors. The three can come together blatantly, as in the attacks on Irish people in such infamous miscarriages as the Guildford Four, the Birmingham Six and the Maguire Family. We know that "the number of life prisoners in England and Wales exceeded 4000...at the end of 1998" which is more than "the combined total for the remainder of western Europe."9 But how many of these people are serving life sentences for crimes they did not commit? 
Three of the four men who "served more than eighteen years in prison on the basis of a confession forged by the police" for the murder of Carl Bridgdewater, a 13 year old schoolboy, were released finally in February 1997. The fourth man died in prison back in 1981. "DC John Perkins who...helped fabricate the evidence...was allegedly involved in at least twenty other cases in which he fabricated evidence," including that of George Lewis who eventually "was awarded £200,000 damages after serving five years in prison as a result of being racially abused, threatened with a syringe and beaten by police who eventually fabricated a confession."10
Is anyone campaigning on behalf of these other cases? How many cover-ups continue in operation? How do the victims, their families and friends sustain these long campaigns for justice? How about the families of the dead? Who campaigns on their behalf? How do they all cope? Are there any legal remedies at all? This is good old Britain. What about trying for an Appeal. One campaign did succeed in taking such a miscarriage to a Court of Appeal. That was in 1996 when it was accepted that Police had threatened witnesses, tampered with and fabricated statements, encouraged witnesses to perjure themselves and that officers had lied at the trial [and] at least two officers... had lied at the Court of Appeal. The court also said that... one of only two prosecution eyewitnesses, could not be believed or relied upon. They said that vital statements... were not disclosed to the defence. They said the Police behaviour in this case was reprehensible... and so on. But at the end of "eight weeks deliberation of all the above new evidence and much more for the defence, the Court of Appeal decided that the convictions were safe."11 This example belongs to the case of Gary Mills and Tony Poole, two young Gloucester men. Or at least they were young when they were first imprisoned.
How long do people have to be incarcerated before the State authorities will confess to their innocence? Gary Mills and Tony Poole are white working class men who have been locked up since 1989 for the murder of Hensley Wiltshire and have no release date. As is the case for people serving life sentences in British Prisons, if they were guilty they would by now have been released on parole. They continue in prison only because they refuse to give in to the authorities, they refuse to deny their innocence. They cannot and will not apply for parole, how can they, not for a crime they did not commit.
Unfortunately for Gary Mills, Tony Poole and their families, their innocence is another's guilt. Evidence here suggests that to find the identity of the killers any investigating officers need not look beyond the ranks of their own colleagues. It appears Hensley Wiltshire died in a police cell, following a brutal and cowardly attack by Gloucester police officers. The unpalatable truth here is simply one more indictment of the criminal justice system, yet another 'black death in custody,' one more 'unlawful killing", abetted by the shocking neglectful behaviour of staff at the Casualty department of a Birmingham hospital.
Some elements of authority are attempting to move on from the bad old days of the criminalisation of black people. Some elements are not moving on at all, some fight a rearguard action, other authorities are simply marking time. As recently as 1995 Paul Condon saw it appropriate to claim, using applied statistics, that "80% of all street robberies in London are carried out by black men."12 This was at the height of the Lawrence Family Campaign, and Paul Condon was the head of the investigation into Stephen's murder.
It is surely only a matter of time until Gary Mills and Tony Poole are released from prison. Will a proper investigation then be launched into the last hours of the man they were convicted of murdering? What sort of justice could be offered the family of Hensley Wiltshire? If the police are guilty of the murder of this young black man will they be prosecuted? Or will the judge deny their non-guilt, charging them with not-innocence in the act of releasing them from prison, another shabby attempt to keep the lid on a can of worms. 

notes
1. Quote taken from Statewatch Number 4 1991.
2. Statewatch Vol. 10 no 1, 2000.
3. Statewatch Vol. 10 nos 1 and 2, 2000. See CARF, Race and Class and other publications where strange suicides or accidental deaths of black people are discussed.
4. See Statewatch Vol. 8 no 1, 1998, and Vol. 9 no 6, 1999.
5. Statewatch Vol. 10 no 1 Jan-Feb 2000.
6. Statewatch Vol. 2 no 1 Jan-Feb 1992.
7. The Independent on Sunday 13.5.1990.
8. Statewatch Vol. 4 no 5 Sept - Oct 1994.
9. Statewatch Vol. 9 nos 3, 4 May-August 1999, quoting from the report entitled "Prisoners' views of the lifer system" by the Prison Reform Trust.
10. The Guardian 21, 24 Feb. 1997, quoted in Statewatch vol. 7 no 1 1997, Vol. 8 no 2 1998.
11. See "Regina v Mills & Poole", for further information; this is an examination of the case produced by the families and friends of Gary Mills and Tony Poole who formed the Set Up For Life campaign following the jailing of the two men; all these years later the campaign for continues, and can be contacted c/o PO BOX 4739, Birmingham B11 1LG.
12. See Statewatch Vol. 5 no. 4 1995. 

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Tales of the Great Unwashed
Ian Brotherhood

Auld Pishy was sitting on the wall outside the Health Centre. He was crying because he had no money left to buy cider and fags. He wiped his nose on the back of his hand, then wiped the back of his hand on his breeks.
A bus moved by, and Pishy saw a wee girl looking at him as it slowed for the lights. She was about three or four, and had her mouth open, trying to bite the glass. Pishy tried to smile, but the effort went into a sob which caught his breath and started him coughing. He leaned forward, trying to get a proper cough going so he could fetch up some of the rattly catarrh. When he had finished hacking he wiped his eyes, looked up, and the bus was gone.
He spat the result of the cough into the patch of grass behind the wall. When he turned his head, there was a pair of legs in view, and he didn't know who they belonged to.
It's yourself Pishy, said the legs.
Pishy looked up. The sun behind the figure made it hard for him to make out the facial features, but the voice told him it was Mambo.
Ah Mambo, you're out and about already, said Pishy, and Mambo gathered his coat about his arse and shuffled forward to sit beside Pishy on the wall.
Is it the flu on you again ? asked Mambo.
It's not the flu this time, said Pishy, I was just in there seeing your man and he says I'm done for.
You're done for ? said Mambo.
Aye, I'm done for now he told me. If it's not the cancer it'll be the arthritis, or maybe it'll be the sciatica or the rheumatoids that's burrowing into me every fibre. 
So they got the tests back then ? said Mambo, and Pishy tried to remember when he had last met Mambo, what he'd already told him.
Sure enough they done the tests and came back to me and says you'll be needing more of them, so they sent me up the town and put wires and all that on me, a whole day I was up there. They had to get the students and them in to have a look cos they says they never saw the likes of it. It's a miracle I've still the power of sight and common sense as well.
Is that what they told you ? said Mambo as Pishy turned to fire another gob into the pale green grass.
They did, and even with the results they've got now they're telling me there's none conclusive or that, the fellas down in London will have to be taking a look as well to make sure before they break the news to me.
So they must have an idea there ?
I think they know more than they tell, but it's the sorting out of all the things that's causing them the difficulty there. Too many ailments in the one body, it's hard to tease them apart if you like.
So that's why you're crying there, said Mambo.
Who said I was crying ? said Pishy, staring up at his larger friend.
I was watching you there before I came across the road. You're an awful man Pishy, an awful man right enough for wearing your heart on the old sleeve.
It's a bit of the hayfever, nothing more, replied Pishy.
Are you sure it's not just cos you've no cash there to buy fags and booze and that ? asked Mambo, and Pishy looked up again, tried to be stern, but the smile was upon him before he knew it and Mambo took the packet of Mayfair from his pocket and flipped open the lid.
Here now, have a fag and we'll talk about it all.
Pishy took out a smoke, let it wobble between his lips as Mambo located his lighter. 
The two friends took a couple of puffs each, looked up the road, then down the road, stood up, and started walking towards The Gate. The town clock struck eleven as they reached the door.

So you can't ask her for a tap. Not even a tenner ? said Mambo.
That's right enough said Pishy, she won't talk at all, not to me anyroad. And for all I tried to help the fucker.
Steady now Pishy, that's your beloved there.
I'm not talking about her. The cat. That's the fella caused all the bother in the first place. It's not like I've ever mistreated the thing or grudged it space. I never stopped her having them things, just so long as they're not coming in the bed at night or making a noise I don't much care what they're about.
Was it the expense then ?
Expense of the cat ? I wouldn't know about that. It gets the same to eat as me, maybe a bit more. That's not a bother anyroad, you're as well cooking for three as two I suppose. No, no, it's that carry-on with the rubber band. The cat was out of sorts. Not that I noticed right enough, but she came to me like that last week, she says, Monty's got a problem, I says what's that then, she says I don't know but he's been eating the ends off the curtains and hawking up balls of hair and that. Sure, that's normal for them fellas I says, they're doing that all the time, it's good for them. 
That's well known right enough, said Mambo as he beckoned Liz set them up again. We had that one, that Tabby, God rest her, used to leave them behind the back door there, wee balls of wet thread. She thought it was skinned mice and made me clean them away.
That's right, that's the things. Hairballs. Standard issue for the cats. But no, she says, it's not right. He's pining for something. Pining ? I says to her, pining ? What would the cat be pining for. He's in a fine house and he gets the regular grub. That's as much as the likes of him can hope for, what business has a cat pining for more than that ? So anyroad, it was always going to be my fault, I should have known it from the start, and it's when the spare belt for the hoover arrived, that's the start of it all.
That wouldn't be cleaning up the hairy balls then, not when they're wet.
No, the box it came in. It's a big fucking box like that for a wee strip of rubber. There was two of them right enough, but you don't need a box that size for a couple of belts. Anyway, I gets the thing out the cupboard, takes it into the front room, takes the end off it, sets about it, that's fine. Five minute job. I was hardly started and she's in shouting the odds, screaming about Monty eating the band. The belts was there. One in the machine, the other still in the plastic. What bands are you on about ? I says, and it turns out the bastard made off with the rubber band that was about the box, just a big long thin sort of a laccy band. She saw him in the kitchen, he had it at the door and was eating the thing down, hacking and retching and all that but eating it down anyway. Then she made a bid to grab him but he panicked and went up on the drainer. By the time I gets in he's gone away up the stairs, so it was half an hour we were upstairs there, her clicking her fingers and making likes of chicken noises and all that. I says, will you stop with that clicking and clucking you're just scaring the fucker and she starts up then cause I called it a fucker and the two of us were slanging it out there up in the bedroom. Eventually I came like that I says fuck this, I'm off and she's on then about the money and that's for the leccy, and I was all set to go in town and pay the thing anyway, but I'll tell you now Mambo, by the time I got to the bottom of the stairs I came like that I says see that twenty, you're right enough it was for leccy burned, and every intention I had to pay it too, but now with your gob and your panic and your nipping I says, I'm away down there now to buy drink and fags and I'll not be back till it's spent.
Was that the Wednesday then ? asked Mambo
That was the Wednesday right enough. That stramash in the Bolthole. Even if I have to apologise another ten times I'll still know in myself that it would never ever have happened if it wasn't for that bastard cat making off with a laccy band, the greedy stupid fucker.
So she heard what happened then ? said Mambo as the new pints arrived.
In the Bolthole ? Jesus no, least not that she says anyway. It was when I got back that same night, I went to the bog and got sorted out, put a cloth on the lump and that, but when I gets down the stairs there she is, she was just in from the shift at the school, so I came like that I says sorry love, about that carry-on and all that, and she's sort of frowning and not talking and that but I knew it was alright. Pension the morra, that'll be first thing I'll be down there pay that leccy and that's my beer money for the weekend gone, but it's no bother and I'm a fool and I'm sorry. So she's sitting there, still not talking but it was that way you know it's going to be alright, the worst's over. It was that millionaire show on, your lass from Wales was just one away from the quarter million when it happened.
Pishy stopped to draw from his pint. Mambo crashed the last two fags.
She was calling for the fifty-fifty so she was, she already used up the other two lives there so she did. So, what's your man Al Gore's wife called, is it Flipper or Tipper ? That was it. Then the door squeaks open and in he comes there, Monty, as bold as you like, strides right across the carpet. Fair enough, I'd a bead in me for sure but I knew the peepers wasn't lying. There was the laccy band hanging out the back end of him, trailing along the carpet it was. She was looking down as well, but I don't know if she noticed right away. It was the best thing at the time, that's what I was thinking anyway, this is the answer to the whole thing, if I can save her Monty from further pain and maybe stop him pining at the same time, so I goes off the seat like that, down on the hunkers, right up behind the thing as fast as I could and got a grab on the end of the band.
You must've been awful fast there.
Like a flash it was, I'm down there and I grabs the end of the band, it's looped round my finger like that, and I yanks at it. So the fella gets some fright and he's up like that, up in the air, straight up like he was blown by a force underneath of him, and twisting his body too, like towards the telly. It's like that way when you see an accident coming, it goes slow motion, but I was sure I had the thing, it was a good grip there behind the crooked finger. I was only trying to do it for his own good as well, get the thing out of him and be done with it. But when he lands he's off towards the door, past me again, but I'm forward on the deck with the band under my hand, couldn't let it go even if I wanted, and I did want to what with the noise coming out of him then. I had to twist to get back upright and he's making a terrible noise altogether, even with him almost out the door and the band a good five feet long there. Jean's screaming like it's her getting the treatment the cat's getting, he's got the ears flat and the teeth out and the spit flying so I came like that, I was a bit panicked myself right enough in case he came at me cos he looked awful serious and that, I says fuck ye then and lets go of the band and he's lying on his back there with the legs akimbo and I swear you could see the eyes focussing on this laccy band heading back for him but it's too late and it's a noise then I never heard the likes of, worse than any banshee it was.
Right on his fellas too that would've been.
Must've been. You pinged him ! that's what she shouts then, you pinged him ! and she was up and off after him but it was too late, he was away out the door and off into the kitchen, out the flap. You could hear it still swinging when we got in there.
So the laccy band never came out then ?
No no, he was away with it. It was the Friday I found it down by the path there, all chewed up and bits of stuff along it, but it was still in the one piece. But he's still not come back either, so she's still not talking.
Aye, he'll be having a think about it all before he comes back.
'Kin right. I went out there on the Sunday, late on it was too, must've been over midnight, putting the bins out for the morning, and it was when I was coming back in right enough, it wasn't even a noise or that. Clear night, the stars was out grand, but I could feel the eyes you know, like burning into the side of the face there, and I turns just at the back door and looks back and there he is, I could see the silhouette against the gable next door there, it was him alright, just the outline of his head and shoulders. He must've been standing on that divider him next door put up. Looking over the wall he was, looking at me, and it was the shivers right enough cos he just stayed there watching. Thanks be to God I couldn't make out the eyes on him, but the shape went down, just like you'd think he was getting lowered by some other creature, the shape went down and the tops of the ears went away. It was him though, no doubts about it. He was checking. Checking on me.
Mambo finished the last of his lager, Pishy his cider. Mambo slapped his pockets, drew out half a dozen coppers, then dropped them into the collection tin chained to the bar. The sound of the clattering coppers drew a smile from Liz. Mambo moved fast.
Liz darling, you couldn't see me right for a half-bottle till the morning ?
Liz puckered and shook her head.
You boys are well stretched as it is, she said, the best I can do you is a two-litre of White Madness.
They left, Mambo with the cider under his overcoat.
Have you any fags in the house ? asked Mambo.
Pishy shook his head.
Right then. That's it. There's only one course left open to us.
Pishy stopped and looked up at his pal.
We'll have to find Monty, get you back in the good books. It's no use a man having no fags and no booze and creeping about the town crying and feeling sorry for his lot.
Mambo strode on, and Pishy followed.
Jean got home from her shift at the school later than usual. She'd got one of the girls in the office to make photocopies of Monty, then made some posters saying 'Lost. Monty. Reward' It was a bad picture, a bit blurry, but it was the last hope. She'd put one in the Post Office, one in the supermarket and one in the charity shop.
Coming up the path, she knew something was wrong. The front door was ajar, and there were wee chunks of tuna all along the garden fence. She dumped the shopping at the step and went inside.
They were in the good room. Mambo was snoring, flat out, the empty plastic bottle beside him. Her man was asleep in his chair. The air stank of rolled-up fags made out of old cigarette butts. The Weakest Link was almost at the end, and the volume was near enough full.
She went back to the front door to get the shopping. She would have to plank the purse before he woke up. He would be after money for fags and cider. There'd be no peace otherwise. She took out a tenner, then hid the purse in the cupboard behind the porridge. They would go out again, she would get to watch her programmes in peace. She made coffee, then put the two cups on a tray with a plate of cheese pieces.
As she was carrying the tray though, Monty walked out from the good room, curling his tail, rubbing his behind against the skirting. He looked happy enough, and was licking his lips.
Mambo stirred when Jean put the tray down on the table. 
Ah Jean, it's yourself, he said.
Jean took the tenner from her pocket, dropped it onto Mambo's chest, then fetched up Monty and went to her room. 

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Bob Holman Interview
Bob Holman Interview
William Clark

I had not been to Easterhouse for some time. Bob Holman is a busy man, so I started asking him some questions as we walked up the stairs of the converted block of houses that are now their thriving Community Centre. How had it all come about? They had started above a group of delapidated shops...?

Bob Holman Then these shops were taken over by the contractors and of course--they originally said that they valued what we were doing in the area and we could probably have the upper floor of these shops. And when they built them there wasn't an upper floor. So we didn't have anywhere. As a result of that there was a public meeting in 1989 and we just formed this organisation Family Action in Rogerfield and Easterhouse (FARE) and we didn't have any premises...I used to work part time for it, just from my flat...
William Clark Who are the power brokers in Easterhouse, I can't quite work out how it's broken down, OK there's the council...?
BH They've got the Greater Easterhouse Development Corporation, now headed by Cllr. Coleman, he's also deputy leader of the Council...
WC So their work is basically to do with housing policy?
BH No. It's all to do with what's called 'Partnerships'...
WC And 'Social Exclusion'...?
BH 'Social Inclusion', in Scotland: 'SIN'--the 'Social Inclusion Network'. They've pumped a lot of money into the area: football pitches and all that kind of thing. It's a very different approach from our approach which is very much being here. This place is run by local residents. To be on a committee you've got to come to the AGM. The idea of this is that local people know best what an area wants. We're not trying to be a Social Services dept. In terms of things like local services, youth clubs, supporting people--we think we're the people who know best what the area wants, and that's been our emphasis, what you might call a bottom-up approach. That kind of approach doesn't get grants of millions of pounds--it gets chickenfeed.
WC Why do you think it is this way?
BH Well it's a strange thing...the Westminster government when it came into power and started the Social Exclusion Unit (SEU) the magic word was 'empowerment': 'we're going to empower local people with the SEU.'
WC As you said: 
"The first thing the Social Exclusion Unit did was to define its own membership, its own leading 12 members. And the 12 members include professionals, a highly paid business person, chiefs from the voluntary sector, people who've been to public school and Oxbridge, but nobody who is unemployed, who is poor, who lives in the estates like Easterhouse. So here's a very strange thing, that immediately the Social Exclusion Unit excludes anybody who is excluded."
But fundamentally the SEU and the Performance &Innovation Unit (PIU) are both run by Geoff Mulgan with their 'third way' Demos-type ideas...
BH 'Empowerment' in that kind of context is a nonsense because the decisions are still being made in the same old way by the same people. What the government has done through the SEU and SIN--it's idea of empowerment--is to set up large 'Partnerships': the Housing dept., Health dept., the Police; they're the people on the Partnership, with a few local representatives. It's quite interesting that in this area they advertised the voting: "you can have four representatives". In the end it only got four nominations, so there wasn't in fact an election. Which I think is indicative about what local people thought of it. So it's really about large organisations in partnership. We know very well that for a small organisation entering into partnership means that we are junior partners. A partnership is senior and junior partners and we are the small fry. So we don't get to distribute money, we get 'consulted', but we don't get to actually make decisions. And I think what organisations like FARE--and we're only one, because there are lots of groups--what we are showing are that local people are capable of making decisions, they can run budgets, they're not going to put it in their pockets and run away, they can appoint staff and sack staff.
WC You seem to be indicating that these large associations of government agencies are getting together to maintain the status quo really. They've got other agendas, which concur with the New Labour agenda: Third Way stuff which was thought an electoral expediency with nothing really to it. Their policy is influenced by their 'social research' and here there's been a bit of a rise of interest in sociology in a similar way that the Thatcher government tried with economics. The rhetoric is now 'social' rather than 'economic'. One of the things I wanted to ask you was with the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), which is the government funded organisation where they get their information--they set up a particular (dubious) branch of that, the Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion (CASE), at the LSE with much the same remit as the SEU. Well in their annual report of 1999, they cite you as taking part in their seminars and that they consulted you...
BH I did take part in their seminars...
WC But doesn't that means you're being used to justify their position...?
BH Well I don't know. If you look at the seminar I really made an attack on what they were doing, the kind of things I'm speaking about now. Criticising the government for having a top down approach and completely undervaluing what we're doing at a local level. I never realised I got cited as part of the gang.
WC You're last on the list! Somehow you get the impression they went round genuinely consulting everyone. This organisation spent three quarters of a million pounds in one year, producing a couple of reports--research into poverty! There's something slightly disgusting about that.
BH It's a point I made in the seminar: that the government can give £2m to that unit and nothing to us. They argue it comes from different budgets, but it's still public money. But a lot of the people on this list on these seminars: Bill Jordan, Peter Townsend, would be critical of the work of that unit.
WC I think it is fundamentally dishonest. When you start to look at the names in their report--the director of CASE, John Hills' work is cited 38 times. He also writes with Geoff Mulgan, what are they going to do with all their information--they're going to send it to the SIU, so they get all this money, use their own work and tell Mulgan stuff he already knows, meanwhile he's moved onto another unit pumping all this stuff out as if it was independent.
BH I know. It's a self-perpetuating organisation. When it first came out I did write a piece for the Guardian, which they never published, criticising setting it up. I could have made a lot more use of the money. One of the professors was saying "there's no point in giving the poor an extra pound a week, it wouldn't make any difference getting people out of poverty," which is true, but I think people on low income would sooner have an extra pound per week than £2m going to this unit. These people are earning £60, £70,000 a year. One of the small things I can do because I've got a small toe-hold into the academic world is I can convey what happens at places like this...
WC That's how blind and remote these people are, that you are the only link they have with the outside world?
BH Geoff Mulgan came straight from public school and Oxbridge straight into...but one of the few good things we've been doing here is--I encouraged the local people to write (a book called Faith in the Poor), six Easterhouse people wrote it--great stuff--about their experiences; which dismisses the myth that people are not articulate here. We had enormous problems getting it published. Penguin told me 'the poor can't write, who wants to read it anyway?' When finally it did get published it sold out.
WC I would have to say that I am a product of Easterhouse but I don't feel overawed by the intellectual weight of these people. There are these prejudices against working class culture in general.
BH I think a lot of that came with Charles Murray and his version of the 'underclass'...
WC Well they don't want to use that phrase now...
BH It still seeps out now and again--Tony Blair uses it now and again--Murray said that Easterhouse was the classic example of under-class society. There are no fathers and the kids run wild...and apparently he based it on a half-day visit here. He's got another book out 'Underclass plus ten', it's been ten years since he wrote that book. Murray's a typical case. He started on the left, Lyndon Johnstone's time, and gradually moved to the right. He is in fact financed by the Sunday Times: by Rupert Murdoch and they're the people who pay for him to come over here and finance the books.
WC Well that's interesting. Obviously these people's theories benefit someone. Within a lot of their ideological shift there is this notion of 'globablisation'. For me it is an excuse for the government carrying on letting multi-national companies do what they want. You mentioned big agencies' agendas swamping everyone: development companies have agendas and consultants and the fact is these people are gaining from the private sector. CASE is funded by Toyota, Demos and its spin-offs in 'sustainable development' are paid by and on the side of big business.
BH It's 'partnerships' isn't it?
WC Yeah, the third way. There's nothing to it. The whole 'Nexus' debate, set up by the government, all these Oxbridge academics and there's no academic basis for it. None.
BH I've read the books...I think the problem is it's so nebulous it's actually quite difficult to criticise, because you can't actually see what they're saying.
WC Which was much the same with monetarist economics, it's got to be slippy. Eventually Thatcher went on TV saying 'well you know I had nothing to do with monetarism.' But you were also mentioned in a magazine article by Ian Christie the deputy director of Demos. He starts with 'the History Man', sociology is tainted by Marx, he tries to erase the last twenty years of what has happened and then lines himself up with British Empiricists Young and Willmot.
BH Michael Young wrote the Labour manifesto in 1945...
WC ...Lord Young.
BH Yes I'm a bit disappointed at that...
WC Well let me read you what Christie wrote:
The example of Bob Holman, former professor of social administration at Bath University who has lived for years on Glasgow's Easterhouse estate as a community worker, rejecting the remoteness of academics from their objects of study, is a counsel of perfection few can follow.
BH I really dislike that sort of thing. There's another chap--Bill Jordan--who's written a little bit about me and he says I'm 'marginalised'. People say these things to put you in a corner so they don't have to accept anything you say--so it is not really relevant. I do find that objectionable. But what it also illustrates is with think tanks people can move into these positions straight from University and they've no real understanding of what life is like for ordinary people. You don't want to give the impression that you've got to be a missionary going into poor areas. But probably because of our own upbringing within working class cultures we've got a greater grasp of what life is like than people who've been brought up by their fathers who're professors and went on from a good school to good universities and then into a think tank. That's a very dangerous mode the government have adopted to get their information.
WC You can say that this is incredibly naive and excuse them, or you can say for example well wait a minute...there's connections here. How come what they're running now within the Labour party mirrors aspects of the process of ideological deception and anti-left propaganda that the US and UK secret services were pushing in the 50s and 60s.
BH I suppose the government gets what it wants. The SEU when it was first set up, with its twelve members--all affluent or business people--there wasn't one member who was unemployed or lived in a deprived area or had any experience at the other end. So it's a very slanted view and also in some ways a very patronising view because the assumption is that powerful people can make the right decisions for people at the bottom end. But in a sense that's a contradiction about what they're saying about empowerment. And that is the fallacy which is behind all the government policy and rhetoric about neighbourhood renewal. Hilary Armstrong is very keen that organisations must belong to local people: but they don't. And that's just what I've been trying to chip away at.
WC But they are trying to suborn Non Governmental Organisations with their policy now. Mulgan's PIU is described as 'exerting pressure' to make sure that people are trapped into conforming. Now that involves psychological pressure, propaganda.
BH Targets. I think a great example of this is the government's SEU document of 'Neighbourhood Renewal'. There's a lot in it about empowerment and local involvement but then it says what the targets are; so the targets already set by government and all local involvement really means is help us to reach these targets we've already set. They've set targets for the reduction of poverty but poverty by their own definition: 'below half average income'. But that is meaningless. Having half average income does not mean that you have got a sufficient income. But in terms of targets what the government hasn't said anything about is in terms of inequality. You can go through that book issued by Alisdair Darling--which has I don't know how many targets--but nothing about reducing inequality. There's nothing about reducing the gap between the rich and the poor. For New Labour, it is prepared to alleviate poverty by their own definition but it isn't prepared to reduce the gap between those people and those at the top. For instance it will not increase personal taxation. It won't increase inheritance tax. I haven't seen their manifesto yet--but it will probably say the same thing: no increase in personal taxation. Until you do that you can't reduce inequality.
WC You say with the definition of Social Inclusion that it is:
...defined as 'Multiple deprivations resulting from a lack of personal, social, political or financial opportunities.' Now this is incredibly broad and vague, and it includes things like kids deprived of school, truancy, even prostitution, ill health. Now of course one wants to stop that kind of social distress, but the trouble is that they're so multiple, so vague, so general, that you can't really get a measure of social exclusion in itself, and it's noticeable that New Labour refuses now to set a target a) for reducing poverty, or b) for lessening inequality. And I think social exclusion really lets it off the hook.
BH In terms of poverty, what New Labour won't do is to assess how much pounds, shillings and pence you need a week to have a decent life style, to enable you to participate fully in society. It's always going back to half average income. Now the Family Budget Unit of London University has in enormous detail worked out how much money you need for a 'low cost but acceptable income'; and that includes having a weeks holiday--not in Italy but in Blackpool. And it shows from that if you're in receipt of income support you're probably about £39 below a stringent (I think too stringent) amount you need to live on. You see the government just refuses to identify how much money you need and that is why it isn't tackling poverty. If you ever meet a Labour politician ask them that question: they'll never answer it.
WC So they've got all these statistics, all this million of pounds worth of 'research' from CASE but...
BH If you ask them how much money does a person need--a lone mum with two kids--per week to have a decent life style--they will not answer.
WC There is also the Acheson Report. [The Report on Health Inequalities carried out by the former British Surgeon-General, Sir Donald Acheson] This says it very simply: you've got to give them more money.
BH That committee of enquiry was set up by the Labour party as soon as they came into government. The basic recommendation was that to overcome health inequalities it isn't enough to alleviate poverty, you've got to reduce inequalities. But of course that's been ignored.
WC It is inequality itself that makes people preventably sick.
BH After it's had years in power New Labour will be able to say that the position of the poor has improved in the sense that Child Benefit has gone up, Income Support's gone up, there's a Minimum Wage; but in the sense of inequality their position has actually worsened because the affluent have made gains at a far greater rate. So in terms of old socialistic principles I think it's been a failure and it follows that therefore the gaps in health won't change. This area in particular: Baillieston has a very high infant mortality rate: I mean it's double. I think it's so offensive that kids under the age of one have twice the chance of dying here than they do in Surrey or Norfolk: I mean it's just so inhumane. But New labour won't change that. Even within Glasgow women here die five years younger than women in more affluent parts of Glasgow. How can any socialist defend that.
WC Well they defend it via the Third Way, where they say 'instead of re-distribution of wealth we're re-distributing opportunities.'
BH Well that is it isn't it: it's not a level playing field--it's nonsense. What equality of opportunity is there for youngsters around here. There are teenagers around here that are not even getting the dole. There are people from the age of sixteen to twenty-one who couldn't cope who didn't like the New Deal and dropped out. That's where the dole gets cut off. There's this great thing in Britain where if you're like seventeen to twenty-one you can't be unemployed: that's one of the reasons why the figures have come down. So you have about 300,000 young people who are actually unemployed, but, they're not receiving benefit. And the measurement now is 'unemployed and receiving benefit'. This is one of the spins that get put on figures. There's the election coming up and they're not only choosing not to vote they can't vote because they're not on the list. They've been disenfranchised in our democratic society. In a way you can understand that. They're not going to vote because politics is meaningless. But within that kind of culture of despair in a way, what's going to happen to them? Some young people without the dole are dependent upon parents who are on the dole--so clearly the poverty of that family is multiplied. Others just drift around from bed to bed. The other side of this is it shows how resilient and strong the society is: that people in poverty are willing to take in people who are in poverty.

Outside in the bright May Day sunshine I walked off to get the train. On the way I passed where I used to live. It had been obliterated, completely demolished, I couldn't even configure where anything had been or where the roads were going, it was just too confusing. As I stood there bewildered, Holman came along and gave me a lift to the station in his car. "Keep Struggling" he said with a cheery wave, and drove off to look after his grandchildren.

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Concerns about the nature and application of the new Terrorism Act Discussion
In his opening remarks Mark Muller, chairing the meeting, said that the discussion had been prompted by the widespread concerns about the nature and application of the new Terrorism Act and especially its implications for long cherished human rights and its impact on minority communities. Parliament's ratification of the proscription of 21 international organisations making it an offence to further their activities in any way fundamentally offended individual human rights. No distinction was drawn between violent and non-violent actions. The Act was a charter for suppressing both ideas and cultural identities and compromised the country's respected tradition of offering sanctuary to political refugees and dissenters.
While it was necessary to combat terrorism and crime, Mr Muller said, the Act added nothing to existing criminal law whose powers were sufficient to deal with the problems. So why was the government acting now? He feared that the implementation of the Act may result in increasing conflict and disorder and cited the experience of the Federal Republic of Germany where similar bans had resulted in conflicts and had merely driven dissent underground. The Act was ill-conceived and came notwithstanding the incorporation of the European Human Rights Act into British law.
Mr Muller then mentioned the case of Kani Yilmaz who gained legal entry into Britain to brief parliamentarians on the PKK's cease-fire, but was later arrested without a warrant on the grounds that he posed a threat to national security. This came under pressure from Turkey. This was all long before the new Terrorism Act, but, he asked, what would be the status of such a meeting in Parliament today? Would it now be deemed an illegal gathering? Mr Muller recalled that 70 MP s signed a letter protesting at Yilmaz's arrest, including current Foreign Secretary Robin Cook. He concluded that the most serious implications for human rights were posed by an Act that made it illegal to hold a peaceful meeting called with the intention of raising a legitimate political issue, like peace between Turkey and the Kurds. Such was the consequences of the failure to distinguish between violent and non-violent offences.
The first speaker, solicitor Gareth Peirce, began by saying that she found the term "terrorist" to be an offensive one because it carried with it a stigma. She was concerned that last year's Act redefined the term very widely to include all protests and any activity that might effect the health and security of any country. Last year the media had reported almost exclusively on the Act's likely effects on road protesters, greens and animals rights activists, but now the reality of its effects were hitting home: it is almost entirely refugee communities who are being targeted with the publication of the 21 proscribed groups.
Ms Peirce then drew a comparison with the way that government and police had targeted the Irish community over 25 years when the PTA was in operation. Thousands of Irish people had been effected: she had herself represented dozens of people charged under the PTA and as it turned out wrongly detained and prosecuted. To fall under the PTA was an ordeal for individuals and their families. Travelling from Ireland and Britain was made a hazardous task. The implications for how the new Act would be operated were clear: the PTA targeted indiscriminately people of particular religions and nationalities. The wider scope of the new Act, allowing the law to try cases of people allegedly involved in terrorism abroad, was one terrifying aspect of the Act. She wondered how lawyers in this country would ever be able to reconstruct the specific political circumstances of a country like Algeria, Egypt and Sri Lanka. 
Every aspect of the Act raised serious questions: there was the issue of withholding evidence on suspects vital to any defence case, but now restricted on security grounds; the impact on peoples' behaviour by creating a mood of fear and uncertainty with no-one really knowing if what they were doing was illegal. Ms Peirce said that under US law the Act would be voided for its vagueness. The Act set up a tension with the Human Rights Act. It had redefined terrorism and human rights on ideological lines setting up people who deserved to be seen as human by the government. This was only those who subscribed to the UK/US model of democracy as the best in the world, no questioning of it could be admissible. She thought the reasons for the Act now were twofold: there were internal political objectives and the domestic impact in its attack on inalienable rights; it was also intended for export being proposed as a model for Europe and already hailed in the press of foreign governments who saw it as a gift. Blair was clearly trying to take the lead in the process of European harmonisation.
She concluded by stating bluntly that the Act did not deserve to remain on the statute books. It had torn up the lessons of the last century and destroyed the moral standing of the country.
Nicholas Blake QC said that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights allowed for the possibility of rebellion against tyranny and oppression. Where laws do not protect human rights there may be just cause to resort to forms of rebellion. There had been evidence of this in English history and the idea had been the basis for people coming here seeking asylum in the past. Such principles were part of the country's political and legal traditions over some 200 years, and especially in the 19th century. The European rebels who had engaged in the 1848 revolutions, for example, had come to London seeking haven as refugees and at that time the idea of rebelling against oppression was regarded as legitimate. In contrast the new Terrorism Act was an advanced attempt to criminalise the whole of the asylum process. The government that had been losing the debate was now stopping legitimate debate and removing the rights of asylum.
Mr Blake was particularly concerned at the way the Act might have the effect of eliminating the arguments about putting protection of the individual at the centre of the law. It came in the context of a wider criminalisation taking place. It removed the right to claim a political defence against extradition rules. Political suspects could not be extradited, only suspects accused of non-political crimes could be. He said that at the UN, Britain had failed to win the debate in defining terrorism as a non-political offence, but was now changing its own laws. The effects of the new Act meant that it would now be difficult for someone to claim asylum. Indeed what was said in an asylum application could conceivably lead to the same person being prosecuted for terrorism. The implications seen in Algerian and Afghan cases did not bode well for the future. Legal opposition to the new law was very limited. Courts had extremely limited powers to strike down decisions made by the executive. A challenge under judicial review was itself very limited. In cases involving national security there will be a new special immigration appeal body which would be where future challenges would be heard. Finally, Mr Blake warned that the new Act was in danger of shortcutting the country's obligations under existing international legislation. 
The playwright Harold Pinter pointed to the prejudiced political calculations behind the Act and the list of proscribed groups. He understood that nowhere was the KLA on the list and suspected that the Nicaraguan Contras would not have been there either. Such groups were both subsidised by the US and seen as "our freedom fighters". He was pleased to be participating in the event but found it depressing that the meeting was taking place after the event. Likewise he found the vote in the Commons where 396 voted in favour of the Act and only 17 against even more depressing. It meant that only 17 people had really subjected the Bill to any detailed critical scrutiny.
The case of Turkey and the PKK was an eloquent example of where Britain stood in relation to human rights across the world and American policy. While Turkey had brutally suppressed the Kurdish people and sought to humiliate them by the arrest of Ocalan, they had failed because of the strength of the Kurdish resi