The Loneliest Jukebox

Graham Barnfield's weblog, being gradually replaced by his Twitter feed - www.twitter.com/GrahamBarnfield

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

When fury trumps thinking

Various Twitterfeeds and a touch of morbid curiosity have kept me apprised of the situation in the Socialist Workers Party (SWP). The open letters by two groups of around 500 people each allowed a trip down memory lane, an anti-Friends Reunited of political (and sometimes literal) sparring partners from Leicester, Nottingham, Brighton, Sheffield and Leeds. Before tweeting or writing anything it was important not to let schadenfreude get the better of me, but looking around the blogs it's clear that not everyone was so restrained.

No sense in repeating all the examples of idiocy, chaos and stupidity that characterized how the Smallest Mass Party in the World handled this issue. But I am struck by the way that the wider discussion has become more degenerate than the SWP itself. Below-the-line commentary and assorted tweets move from serious concerns about rape allegations to bib-soiling dumbness in 140 characters.
Some examples:
1) Presumption of innocence treated as a nicety of bourgeois law (sometimes referred to as 'bourgeois law' with scare quotes): Both alleged rapists, Billy Delta and a Yorkshire organiser, are being treated as guilty i.e. as actual rapists. One Twit even tweeted 'No one will ever work alongside, let alone join, a party that defends accused rapists'. Ever heard of the Scottsboro Nine? The key word is accused: in terms of criminal law, living people are innocent until proven guilty. (Yes, there's some added complication coming in from the Scottish category 'not proven', apparently also introduced into one of the SWP's internal hearings on alleged rape.) The different accounts of what went on make both of those accused sound like deeply unpleasant men, but still the key word here is accused. (Ironically, both comrades were also the protagonists in criminal cases where it was claimed the police were fitting them up; in such situations the presumption of innocence is useful to a defendant.)

2) While the SWP has been ostracised for wanting to keep the state out of rape allegations, at least one alleged victim - Comrade W - is also implicitly criticised (and explicitly slated below the line on Harry's Place) for not going to the police. From this point, the commentaries sidestep into attacks on the old-fashioned principle of voluntary association, which is now presented as intrinsically sinister, echoing that News of the World hack who argued, in the run-up to the Leveson Inquiry, that 'privacy is for paedos'. How the volunteers of the SWP choose to organise themselves is their business, frankly. When a private organisation gets it wrong (or is being disagreed with from the outside), it is should be open to criticism, but not to external control by snoopers.  This includes cults: the tolerant standpoint is to treat the adult members (i.e. age 18+) as adults who have made bad choices, not as little kids.

3) Double standards: outside the organisation, a common complaint about the Delta case is that the verdict was not the one the complainant wanted. From this vantage point, sections of the blogosphere go on to assert Delta's guilt. Meanwhile the Yorkshire case, where the accused WAS 'punished' by the SWP for his actions, is treated as a 'safe' verdict where the main problem is alleged to be the inadequate punishment. YOU CAN'T HAVE IT BOTH WAYS. Either the use of the SWP Disputes Committee on criminal matters is legitimate or it is not. (This is different from whether or not it SHOULD be dealing with criminal cases; the DC, like the blogosphere, is not a court of law.) Which brings us to...

4) Taking the alleged rapists to court: For all I know, this flurry of verbiage and media coverage might be enough to jump-start a police investigation. The cops could even create an open-ended 'historic' inquiry looking into years of SWP or far-left malfeasance (call it Operation Placard). Some in the blogosphere say they want this to happen. If so, why are they also continually publishing the REAL NAMES of the alleged rapists? If Delta and Mr NudeNoob ever end up in court, their defence teams could produce a few screenshots in order to claim that their clients can't get a fair trial because of their notoriety. In other words, people pushing for a criminal trial AND tweeting/blogging the pair's identities are undermining the criminal trial that they claim they want to see. They can't have their cake and eat it too.

5) Collective guilt: what ever happened to individual responsibility? Let's say these two did do what they are accused of. They should both take responsibility. Did people around them cover up the specific acts? If so, they are partly culpable too - maybe under criminal law, certainly morally. The idea that somehow this is the fault of the left or far left as a whole - will any similarities to Gerry Healy being treated as evidence of a real sex offenders' network going back to the 1960s - is intolerant and unjust. Shrill guilt-by-association rhetoric, long a favourite of the SWP, reflects badly on the people who use it. In the 1980s the British left spent some time campaigning against the courts and prisons treating people as 'types' (although campaigning less successfully and less often than they remember it); helping us to resist state oppression is the component of criminal law which, reasonably, lets the individual 'have his (or her) day in court'. Let's leave guilt by association to Nick Cohen, rather than make it into a radical-sounding argument. See what George Monbiot thinks as he slops out at Lord McAlpine's nominated charity.

6) "It's about rape, stupid": Okay, then treat it as a matter of criminal law, as you would if the alleged offence had happened in a gasket factory rather than a political party. Make a start by saying "It's about rape allegations, stupid." Then, if the complainants' attitude is one of "if you want to make a situation worse, ask a policeman", so be it (i.e should they choose not to press complaints). If is about a violent act committed by an individual, stretching this to attack the wider 'left' is illogical; Tony Benn and Ken Loach haven't even been accused of anything yet. Yes, there are structural factors in society which explain - not excuse - rape, but these would cause outrage if accepted as a valid defence by the individual responsible. A currently fashionable phrase actually gets things back to front: we are now more alert to the problem of rape. It is now more unacceptable than in earlier historical periods. "Bloke was only playing cupid" rarely works as a defence now; it's unlikely that the casual rape scene in High Plains Drifter (1973) would get filmed today. Cultures don't rape - rapists do.

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Sunday, February 20, 2011

Not again

Temporarily boring:
Links to one of my old blog posts from 23 February 2006 have just appeared online as 'evidence' of, er, something or other. My post, from almost five years ago to the day, considered whether the author of the Temporary Hoarding blog had a bad memory or was just making stuff up in response to my blog. By reading other autobiographical material on his blog and elsewhere, it became clear that he was claiming to have been in two places at once, among other things. (Bear with me on this, reader.) Soon a reply to me appeared, now dated "4/8 March" (2006); the date indicates that two versions of the post existed, with some clean-up done on the first entry in the intervening days before the 8 March version.

Much silliness survives in the new edit, casting doubt on its reliability. For instance, there's an alleged screening of Gone with the Wind in Sheffield which I am supposed to have organised but which DID NOT HAPPEN. Full stop. It's a lie or a hallucination. Anyone who can prove I staged this event and that my memory is playing up or that I am lying wins a cash prize. 


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Tuesday, November 09, 2010

Inanimate Object

As you may have noticed, this blog has slowed down to less than a crawl. While there will be updates from time to time, the inane banter and self-promotion continues in full swing at my Twitter feed. See you there.

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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Near Silence in the Library

Not a lot of blogging of late. Some of my pithier updates now appear on Facebook or Twitter. Liking the sound of my own voice won't cut it anymore, not that it ever did. As Bourdieu reminds us:

Now, if there is one thing that our ‘modern’ or ‘postmodern’ philosophers have in common, beyond the conflicts that divide the, it is this excessive confidence in the power of language. It is the typical illusion of the lector, who can regard an academic commentary as a political act or the critique of texts as a feat of resistance, and experience revolutions in the order of words as radical revolutions in the order of things. (Pascalian Meditations, p.2)

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Friday, October 31, 2008

Happy halloween

So here I am in an internet cafe, blogging next to Amy Rigby who is doing a gig down the road with Wreckless Eric later tonight. Outside, the Local Council has issued a detailed warning about the dangers this Halloween:

We are working with the police to reduce the anxiety that is caused to members of our community at this time of year.
‘Sorry No Trick or Treat’ posters will be available in wfm 20 October issue, from the community safety van or you can download your ‘
Sorry No Trick or Treat’ poster here (946KB PDF file)
The poster can be displayed in your window or door to discourage trick or treaters from calling. Remember that you do not have to open your door to them:
Do not let anyone in your house unless you are happy with their identity
Do not deal with doorstep sales people unless you are sure they are genuine
Always ask for identification from official callers
Halloween safety tips for parents and children
For safety reasons children should never trick or treat alone. Parents may want to consider having a fancy-dress themed Halloween party at home as an alternative to trick or treating.
Parents and children:
Do not go into strangers home
Restrict trick or treat visits to homes with outside lights on
Use costumes with light or bright coloured material and trim
Check to see that costumes do not interfere with walking
Set a time limit for your children to trick or treat and designate a specific route to take
Encourage children to use face paint and/or make-up rather than hoods, wigs or masks that can block vision
Check all treats before the children eat the sweets and other Halloween goodies
Stay in areas that are well lit with street lights but also take a torch just in case
Be visible and take care when crossing the road
Report any suspicious or criminal activity
Don't knock on doors where there is a sign saying 'sorry no trick or treat'
Police are urging trick or treaters to show consideration for vulnerable and elderly members of the community this Halloween and even though Halloween is supposed to be spooky, be careful not to frighten the elderly.
To report anti-social behaviour call Waltham Forest Direct 020 8496 3000


Probably safer indoors, but for the back-to-back gorno movies showing on Freeview. I noticed from the TV listings that Saw, Saw 2, Hostel, 2001 Maniacs and Reeker were all doing their bit to add to the festivities recently.

Enjoy your evening.

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Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Full disclosure

At the start of this month I was chatting to Terri Senft, author of Camgirls. I never got around to applying my crude binary logic and asking the $64,000 dirham question, namely: the breakdown of public and private - is it a good thing or a bad thing?

In the interests of full disclosure, I can say that in the month of September I saw Forster Gallery-hosted bands Penguins, Kill Kenada and, elsewhere, The Secret Project. I saw Leicester City beat Leyton Orient and went to the opening night of the Russian Film Festival. I bought the "Neptune City" CD and watched Carnivale season 1.

Not the most useful information ever to come your way. But more on all this in a future post.

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Friday, November 23, 2007

The Pro-Waugh left: a decent anecdote

It’s obvious that the decent left likes a bit of Evelyn Waugh. Take Christopher Hitchens, for instance, as he sticks up for Martin Amis:

In the same essay that initially attacked Amis, Eagleton also slammed me for disappointing him and not, after all, becoming the George Orwell of my generation. I have instead, he snorts, become the Evelyn Waugh! How is one to come to grips with a man so crude in his sneers that his idea of an insult is to compare me to one of the greatest novelists of the past century?

Nick Cohen is also a fan and riffing off fictional entities the Daily Beast and Lord Copper is one of his ways of talking about the British media today.

Another familiar Cohen trope is his annual exposés of the erstwhile Revolutionary Communist Party (1981-1997). A couple of these drew on the anecdotes of the historian Dave Renton, until an inevitable parting of the ways:
“I used to have correspond occasionally [sic] with the journalist Nik Cohen [sic]: until the Iraq war. He interviewed me twice for pieces in the New Statesman. I tried emailing him as the bombings in Afghanistan started. By the end, we could hardly speak."

Renton may or may not crop up as “John” in one of these articles when it appeared in the Observer. He’s definitely in the second of the series, observing an RCP member who won’t give money to a beggar because it’s “helping capitalism”.

I also remember Comrade Pappenhacker, who was perennially rude to waiters. He used to say that “every time you are polite to a proletarian you are helping bolster up the capitalist system.” He was not in the RCP, but part of the supporting cast of Evelyn Waugh's novel Scoop (Centenary Edition, p.32).

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Sunday, November 04, 2007

Something Wiki This Way Comes

Not long ago I blogged an anecdote illustrating the unreliability of Wikipedia as a research tool (18 October). I'm not sure if it's a coincidence or not, but within five days user 86.136.176.158, apparently a London-based BT Broadband customer, nipped onto the page about me and "associated" me with an organisation that was disbanded in 1997. (My weekly TV and radio appearances in summer 2005 were also cut from "frequent" to "some", although with hindsight, given the mindlessness of most of the radio slots, I would have settled for "some".)

The user history shows an hour spent online toying with a fleeting obsession, suggesting a pound sterling wasted on "research" in a London internet cafe. But then at close to 2 a.m., up go six factoids, suggesting both personal knowledge to do with left-leaning greens in higher education such as Derek Wall (if they are correct), and a home broadband connection. Hence the following cyber-footprint (most recent changes first):

02:01, 24 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Institute of Education‎ (Notable people) (top)
01:59, 24 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Denis Smalley‎ (top)
01:58, 24 October 2007 (hist) (diff) City University, London‎ (Academics)
01:57, 24 October 2007 (hist) (diff) City University, London
01:56, 24 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Goldsmiths, University of London
01:54, 24 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Derek Wall‎ (Political Career) (top)
21:51, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Entryism‎ (In the United Kingdom)
21:51, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Front organization‎ (See also)
21:50, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Front organization‎ (See also)
21:50, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Front organization‎ (See also)
21:50, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Entryism‎ (See also)
21:49, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Entryism‎ (See also)
21:36, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) James Heartfield
21:36, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) James Heartfield
21:35, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) James Heartfield
21:12, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Fiona Fox (UK press officer)‎ (top)
21:11, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Claire Fox‎ (Criticism)
21:08, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Living Marxism‎ (George Monbiot and the 'LobbyWatch Network')
21:07, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Brendan O’Neill
21:04, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Brendan O’Neill
21:04, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Brendan O’Neill
21:00, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Graham Barnfield
20:59, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Graham Barnfield
20:58, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Living Marxism‎ (See also)
20:57, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Living Marxism‎ (George Monbiot and the 'LobbyWatch Network')
20:51, 23 October 2007 (hist) (diff) Graham Barnfield

Why beat a three-hour retreat from, err, repeating information in the public domain, Woodward? Scared of missing the 10-minute freeview on the Adult Channel? Trying to catch last orders, unaware of Britain's relaxed licensing laws? Get a life or at least go to bed...

Once again the blogosphere/wikiworld is shown to be a great place for avoiding important issues. Next thing someone will have grammar-flame drama queen Oliver Kamm bang to rights, for calling Flight KAL 858 Flight 857, or some other such breakthrough ...

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Wednesday, February 07, 2007

It's the done thing

Blog watchers will be aware of the recent competition between bits of the commentariat to spot obscure figures from public life. It's like a neo-con version of Heat magazine.

By coincidence, this long weekend I managed sightings of Bob Crow near Farringdon tube, Iain Duncan Smith and Guardian feature writer Laura Barton. When do I get sent my membership card and decoder ring?


The truly observant will have noticed that the real money is in property (e.g. see Jeremy Warner, "Gherkin sold. London's commercial property market is booming, and with good reason", Independent, 6 February 2007, p.37) and not in trainspotting.

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