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Alternative site: https://thesaker.si/saker-a... Site was created using the downloads provided Regards Herb

offsite link The Saker blog is now frozen Tue Feb 28, 2023 23:55 | The Saker
Dear friends As I have previously announced, we are now “freezing” the blog.? We are also making archives of the blog available for free download in various formats (see below).?

offsite link What do you make of the Russia and China Partnership? Tue Feb 28, 2023 16:26 | The Saker
by Mr. Allen for the Saker blog Over the last few years, we hear leaders from both Russia and China pronouncing that they have formed a relationship where there are

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Public Inquiry
Interested in maladministration. Estd. 2005

offsite link RTEs Sarah McInerney ? Fianna Fail?supporter? Anthony

offsite link Joe Duffy is dishonest and untrustworthy Anthony

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offsite link RTE in breach of its own editorial principles Anthony

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Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

offsite link Experts Call For Return of Lockdown-Style Social Distancing as Flu Surges, Claiming ?a Fifth of Thos... Tue Dec 24, 2024 13:46 | Will Jones
Experts?have issued an urgent call for lockdown-style social distancing ahead of Christmas Day amid surging flu infections, claiming that a fifth of those infected have no symptoms but can spread it.
The post Experts Call For Return of Lockdown-Style Social Distancing as Flu Surges, Claiming “a Fifth of Those Infected Have No Symptoms But Can Spread It” appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

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J.K. Rowling has led a feminist backlash against?Nicola Sturgeon?after she was accused of ?rewriting history? over the gender self-ID law controversy by claiming there was no public opposition until "forces muscled in".
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offsite link Science Shock: CO2 is Good for the Planet, Peer-Reviewed Studies Suggest Tue Dec 24, 2024 09:00 | Chris Morrison
Dramatic evidence has been published in a number of recent science papers that CO2 levels are already?'saturated', meaning little or no further warming is to be expected and rising CO2 levels are all beneficial.
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offsite link Whoever Rules Britain Is Going to Be Unpopular Tue Dec 24, 2024 07:00 | Noah Carl
It isn't so much that the Tories are getting more popular as that Labour is getting less so. Which illustrates a more general predicament for the Tories and any other party that might have aspirations to government.
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offsite link News Round-Up Tue Dec 24, 2024 00:40 | Richard Eldred
A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
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The Suburbs Are Ticking... Why The Nihilism Of The Paris Riots Is Not A Political "Insurrection"

category international | rights, freedoms and repression | feature author Monday November 07, 2005 19:09author by Kay Velvet - The Glorious Revolutionary Federation of Fortune 500 Killers (M50/Blanchardstown Chapter)author address mmm skyscraper... i love you.author phone 666 Report this post to the editors

Re-branding of rioting by leftists solves nothing

An attempt to look at the Paris riots, with more questions than answers.

The last seven days have been interesting. Here at home there was a large gathering of union workers protesting against the casualisation of labour at Irish Ferries, who plan to lay off Irish workers and employ Eastern Europeans at lower wage rates in their place. In Argentina, demonstrators opposed to the exploitation of Latin America by multinationals clashed with riot cops at the FTAA summit, providing the now familiar unwelcome mat for Dubya. Undoubtedly the focus was on Paris however, as it entered its second week of rioting after two teenagers were electrocuted to death fleeing from police.

Already there is revisionism happening in left circles regarding the events of the last eleven days in the banlieues of Paris (and now further afield). Several commentators and newspapers in France have been drawing comparisons between the rioting in depressed districts of the city with the student and general strike in May/June 1968, while others sympathetic to the Palestinian cause and speaking up in favour of rights for Islamic communities in the aftermath of the War in Afghanistan have been calling it "the French Intifada". Both of these paralells are flawed. The soixante-huitards may have been involved in street clashes with the CRS, but these clashes had an explicit political dimension and statement behind them; and even the tactics used differ markedly from those on the streets of Paris now. Nobody is denying either that the situation of the mostly Black and Arab families is grim, but to suggest that it is equivalent to the oppression suffered by the people in the West Bank or the Gaza Strip is complete hyperbole.

What is happening at the moment in Paris is part of a continuum of mass urban riots, as opposed to organised political insurrections or direct actions, that have been a feature of Western city life for the past 50 years (and further beyond into the past, although the development of consumer society and the spread of the car as the main mode of transport mean that the rioters have different targets and tools to light up their fires with). Take your pick from a long list of urban meltdowns, from Watts 1965, Newark '67, Tampa '80, Brixton/Toxteth '81, Broadwater Farm '85, Los Angeles '92, Cincinnati 2001 - and these are just the ones that I can remember off the top of my head, and only in the English speaking world. Paris 2005 will become part of this timeline.

Regrettably in these urban riots, there is little hope or central message behind them, only decentralised nihilism and unfocused property damage committed by disenfranchised young (mostly male) people. In the wake of the Rodney King riots in 1992, similar revisionism was taking place, referring to the riots as a multiracial insurrection. The assault on Reginald Denny at the beginning of these riots was as brutal and racist as that of the four cops on King. Likewise in Paris it is hard to justify or defend the burning of public transport and local amenities such as a community centre or gym, or explain the political reasoning behind an elderly woman being splashed with petrol and set alight as she attempted to disembark a hijacked bus.

However, in the words of the Situationists (who were defending the looting and arson in Watts) "Let the sociologists bemoan the absurdity and intoxication of this rebellion. The role of a revolutionary publication is not only to justify the Los Angeles insurgents, but to help elucidate their perspectives, to explain theoretically the truth for which such practical action expresses the search." Perhaps these days it is the role of Indymedia articles and peer review to try and explain the actions of the Paris rioters in a radical, accurate, and passionate telling of truth.

One origin of this (and most) Western urban rioting is colonialism. Rich, imperialist, white countries happily preached about liberty, equality, land and brotherhood while going to town on their African pals, taking them for everything they were worth, practicing a level of violence much more intense than any burning of cars or bins. Post WWII when it wasnt so p.c. to be occupying other countries, eventually (after much political pressure from the people of the oppressed states themselves, rather than just collective guilt on the part of the Allies for mirroring the Nazis Lebenstraum policy) this resulted in the "Scramble to Get Out of Africa". Ghana became the first independent Black state in Africa in 1957, while the predominantly Arab nations of Morocco and Tunisia freed themselves from the yoke of French rule a year previously in 1956. Algeria followed suit in 1962 after a civil war.

Rather than repair the damage, imperial nations chose to indulge in neo-colonialism by holding on to strategic economic resources through private companies. So although the new independent African nations had political independence, their financial means to stabilise were removed, leading to the breakdown and corruption often associated with the continent today. Many of the colonial "subjects" had work and travel rights in their imperial parent, so they ended up there as economic refugees/migrants, possibly with a healthy measure of antipathy towards their hosts. The generation rioting on the streets are the children of the colonised.

Rather than accept these people as equals, apologise for and acknowledge enormous past mistakes during imperial terror campaigns, and legislate for the positive emancipation and "affirmative action" of integration into the host society, life continues much the same as before, as if nothing had happened. So, the colonial subjects will always be looked down on, ignored, or treated as an "other", outside the realm of "normal" life and society. This goes on for years and the separation continues. Whether its Africans in the USA, Pakistanis in the UK, Algerians in France, or the Aboriginals in Australia (who still have to suffer the indignation of being the other in their own country), the tension builds for years and years until one little spark sets it all off in an explosive orgy of anger, violence, and frustration. The refusal or denial to reach peaceful and meaningful resolution with the legacy of colonialism will come back and erupt in urban districts populated by the communities affected by it, regardless of which generation is dealing with the exclusion.

Another origin of the rioting is the trickle down effect of free market capitalism and globalisation. The fabric of the labour market has changed almost beyond recognition in most European countries since 1968. There are very few manufacturing and primary industry jobs remaining, many of which have relocated to the far East where labour is cheap, unregulated, and non-unionised. Rather than protect jobs with legislation, and work in tandem with the economies of the far east, successive states have allowed multinationals to up and leave at a whim. The effect of this move is felt on both sides of the world - in the richer West, whole communities built up around factories are instantly destroyed, while in the poorer East, workers are exploited to the point of death and the multinationals do not have to comply with environmental standards, polluting the immediate surroundings and beyond far more than previously.

These skilled manual labour jobs were traditionally occupied by French workers, but there was also space for the North African immigrants, as well as in auxiliary openings related to large scale production plants, such as catering, maintenance, transport, etc. With the disappearance of these jobs and the slide towards a service industry (which people with even slight language difficulties find it impossible to find a job in), it has slowly resulted in a scenario where large swathes of the population cannot and most likely will not find employment in the forseeable future. This bleak outlook builds up over time, and slides once strong family-based communities into drug abuse, petty theft, and other antisocial activity.

The self-immolation happening in Paris communities is a reflection of this despair and complete disbelief in the future. People simply dont care any more. When you have a job that values you as a person, and a family that cares for you and your friends, you generally dont gamble on it for a night of rioting with the risk of injury, arrest, or even death. This complete detachment from the concept of society is visible in the targets of the rioters. Left wing opportunist commentators can defend some of the targets such as police stations, car dealerships, and banks; but schools, local shops, buses and community centres which local residents associations doubtlessly fought long and hard for have also gone up in smoke and rubble. This type of anti-community vandalism regrettably is commonplace in poor districts of major cities - which the state is happy to let happen to a degree. When it spills into the more affluent suburbs, it is only then that the crackdown begins.

The fire that burns within the heart of the rioters will probably only be extinguished by a long spell of cold rain and winds. The government in France has made the repeated blinkered mistake of a law and order response, further fanning the flames of anger. Based on previous examples of such urban rioting, there will be state committees set up to investigate the causes behind it, but nothing will really change. The rioters arrested will not be shown any leniency, and in five years time when they are released from prison, their rage will burn just as brightly as before. They will not be able to secure employment due to a criminal conviction, and their children will learn of this heady time in exalted tones, as something to look up to, to garner respect from. The cycle continues.

The net result of the Paris riots will not be some mass proletarian consciousness awakening and sudden crystallisation into a political movement - because "the left" is for the most part fractured in urban areas and simply not present on the ground. The nihilism of the rioting is born of hate and desperation, and into the eye of the storm (or the calm after) steps political movements which seek to exploit and benefit from this deep emotion. This can range from both the extreme and mainstream right wing, promising protection to the scared white neighbourhoods, to religious fundamentalism, which elevates a social struggle into a completely different, celestial battle - only offering a way out through the misery of further violent conflict or even complete self-destruction with the promise of salvation and pleasure in "the next world". In the context of current global geopolitics, this seems the inevitable next step in France for the immigrant communities, sadly drawing in young people into the trenches of the War on Terror. Religious fundamentalism (of any stripe) ultimately is destined to repeat centuries-old disharmony with its dogma and chronic monolithic view of the world.

What can progressive movements do during and after these riots? One (perhaps foolhardy) option is to organise and jump in at the deep end, engaging in the confrontations and aiming the destruction at more 'legitimate' targets of capital, such as those attacked during large summit mobilisations - and issuing communiques afterwards explaining your actions. This is not opportunistic, rather an action that lies in the roots of the belief that revolution can happen at any time, so now is as good as any to make it your own. Another, perhaps more palatable and less dangerous action is to organise solidarity marches with and in the communities perpetrating and affected by the violence - not afterwards when it cools down, but now. This means talking with people on the ground, engaging in a long and difficult time of community work, organising prisoner and legal support, and exploring long, hard answers that stretch beyond the usual realms of sloganeering/rhetoric and cliched "activism" within a closed circle.

Whatever the outcomes of the rioting, let us not try to re-label it as some sort of serious conscious political uprising, or manipulate the destruction of working class areas and amenities as being a positive development. Mature and responsible questions and actions will hopefully lead to long term, intelligent answers, rather than perpetuating the misery and despondency of huge sections of French society. The pressure has been building up for years, and now that it has all exploded in a juissance of fire, a magical solution isnt going to materialise overnight in amongst the debris of cars and bins.

Can you spot the difference...
Can you spot the difference...

 #   Title   Author   Date 
   French anarchist statements     Joe    Mon Nov 07, 2005 12:37 
   not all bad.     royale with cheese    Mon Nov 07, 2005 13:03 
   I've seen enough disaster and urban riot to know     iosaf    Mon Nov 07, 2005 13:33 
   Is it only "political" when someone writes about it?     R. Isible    Mon Nov 07, 2005 18:11 
   I agree with r isible     eeekkkkk    Mon Nov 07, 2005 18:30 
   they may be "political"     x    Mon Nov 07, 2005 18:46 
   As an (apolitical) aside though ...     tt    Mon Nov 07, 2005 18:52 
   After affects of LA 1992     R. Isible    Mon Nov 07, 2005 19:00 
   Who's is calling intifada     joe    Mon Nov 07, 2005 19:10 
 10   Good LA Riot Effect     Anonymous    Mon Nov 07, 2005 21:36 
 11   paris brule     paris brule    Mon Nov 07, 2005 22:04 
 12   A Mad One All Right     D'Other    Mon Nov 07, 2005 22:25 
 13   If the left have no idea of whats going on     iosaf    Mon Nov 07, 2005 23:29 
 14   National Oppression IS Political     John Brown Book Club    Mon Nov 07, 2005 23:36 
 15   Responsible For What?     D'other    Mon Nov 07, 2005 23:38 
 16   Corporate Hierarchy     Harold    Tue Nov 08, 2005 01:00 
 17   to D'Other     dot    Tue Nov 08, 2005 01:36 
 18   Over 1,200 detained (not arrested)     R. Isible    Tue Nov 08, 2005 04:51 
 19   support the insurrection now     morto    Tue Nov 08, 2005 05:54 
 20   What the hell are you talking about?     stop this madness now    Tue Nov 08, 2005 12:03 
 21   "The questions is..."     z    Tue Nov 08, 2005 12:06 
 22   the progress of chaos & the imposition of curfew     iosaf    Tue Nov 08, 2005 13:22 
 23   It seems very ironic and downright scary     eeekkkk    Tue Nov 08, 2005 13:35 
 24   Hi ec! yes its scary, draconian and unjust & we see the UMP play into the FN hands "as usual".     iosaf    Tue Nov 08, 2005 13:46 
 25   some political gains in the bank? Brixton tapes     eeeekkkkkk    Tue Nov 08, 2005 14:07 
 26   interesting connections.     iosaf    Tue Nov 08, 2005 14:53 
 27   First hand reaction on Slugger     eeekkkk    Tue Nov 08, 2005 14:54 
 28   what the riots are about     Gearoid    Tue Nov 08, 2005 16:19 
 29   Weather outlook     Amic dels Pobles    Tue Nov 08, 2005 17:28 
 30   Tonight's french tv viewers are getting a lot of graphics.     infographie    Tue Nov 08, 2005 20:20 
 31   Amiens     wee willy winkie    Wed Nov 09, 2005 00:07 
 32   How deep is the hatred of this existence     Tiamat    Wed Nov 09, 2005 05:19 
 33   Burning their own spaces!     observer    Wed Nov 09, 2005 09:52 
 34   Anti-Social Scum     seedot    Wed Nov 09, 2005 11:59 
 35   day 1 of the 12 day curfew after the 13th night of the riots     iosaf    Wed Nov 09, 2005 14:30 
 36   links     dunk    Wed Nov 09, 2005 18:36 
 37   have you gone to that link today?     guffaw    Wed Nov 09, 2005 21:19 
 38   Update from Wee Willy Winkie land.     iosaf    Wed Nov 09, 2005 21:38 
 39   Some People Are Very Excited.     D'Other    Thu Nov 10, 2005 01:17 
 40   What weakness?     R. Isible    Thu Nov 10, 2005 01:36 
 41   14th night tally :-     iosaf    Thu Nov 10, 2005 13:06 
 42   15th night Wee willy winkie is ready.     iosaf    Thu Nov 10, 2005 21:11 
 43   Live from Paris 75     Rob Dowling    Thu Nov 10, 2005 22:11 
 44   The rebellion touches Belgium and Germany     red star    Fri Nov 11, 2005 12:35 
 45   BY ANY MEANS     Con Carroll    Fri Nov 11, 2005 18:19 
 46   15th night Tally - 3rd evening of Emergency - 25 districts of 751 in curfew.     iosaf    Fri Nov 11, 2005 18:22 
 47   Riots: 121BC to 2005AD     redjade    Fri Nov 11, 2005 20:48 
 48   16th night Tally - 4th evening of Emergency - 25 of 751 districts curfewed.     iosaf    Sat Nov 12, 2005 12:47 
 49   correctedTally : for 16th night rioting 4th night emergency powers.     iosaf    Sat Nov 12, 2005 13:19 
 50   other updates "police brutality case"     iosaf    Sat Nov 12, 2005 13:29 
 51   updates     iosaf    Sun Nov 13, 2005 12:27 
 52   18th night rioting 6th night emergency. (sunday to monday)     iosaf    Mon Nov 14, 2005 13:42 
 53   chirac on TV     iosaf    Mon Nov 14, 2005 22:03 
 54   Link to International Viewpoint Articles on the French Events     John Meehan    Wed Nov 16, 2005 01:09 
 55   at 6.20pm on the 27th October, 2 teenagers died in Clichey sous Bois, Paris     iosaf    Sat Dec 17, 2005 11:02 
 56   Very interesting sociological article about french suburb riots     eeekkkk    Wed Jun 13, 2007 12:42 


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