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Patel, Johnson, taking the knee and racism

A very good post by muso/activist Billy Bragg on Facebook. Hopefully he’d not object to my quoting it in its entirety:

“It saddens me to say it, but no one should be surprised at the outburst of racist abuse suffered by Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho and Bakayo Saka following England’s defeat by Italy on Sunday night. There had already been reports of the constant stream of racist invective directed at black team members throughout the tournament. While the rest of us were enjoying the feelgood factor of seeing an England men’s team succeed like no other has done since 1966, there were some who felt only bitterness at the sight of a multiracial expression of Englishness being lauded in the media.

Shamefully, the belligerent, bigoted few – and they are a few – felt justified in their prejudices because of the permissive signals they were given by politicians and pundits who were outraged that the team should seek to highlight the abuse suffered by people of colour. By taking a knee in solidarity with the victims of racism, the England team were forcing us to confront something many people in this country would rather not talk about.

Camilla Tominey expressed this preference for blinkers clearly in the Times on 9th July in an article headlined ‘The Euros have destroyed the Leftist myth of a backward, racist England’. One would hope that she and all those who questioned the validity of the players taking a knee now understand the vicious magnitude of the racism that our fellow citizens of colour face on a day to day basis.

Priti Patel’s comments in support of the boo boys and the failure of the Prime Minister to condemn their actions were also predictable. We live in a country where a TV station was recently launched with the specific aim of waging a ‘war on woke’. Although the term is never defined, it is clear from the programming that what GB News is at war with is empathy.

It’s easy to dismiss the ‘culture war’ agenda that turns a trivial matter like the removal of a picture of the Queen from a student’s common room into front page outrage, but we ignore it at our peril. Look closely at the battles that the culture warriors seek to stir up and you’ll see a white heterosexual status quo actively fighting a rearguard action against the progress we have made towards an inclusive, diverse society.

And we have made progress. A recent poll revealed that just 10% believe that you have to be white to be English, a number that would have been inconceivable 20 years ago. But the events of the past 48 hours prove that we can take none of it for granted. Racism can’t be defeated by a feelgood factor. It takes concerted efforts by the majority of fair-minded citizens to marginalise and ultimately change the mindset of the bigoted minority.

How do we do that? Well the first step is to refuse to cede the floor to the racists. It’s understandable that people looking at the behaviour of those few England fans would shake their heads and want nothing to do with the English identity, but that would be to betray the legacy of those lads who have shown us a different vision of what it means to be English.

For the past month, the white members of the England team have been taking the knee in solidarity with their black and mixed race colleagues who have been the target of racist abuse – and have continued to do so despite the vitriol aimed at them. Now it’s our turn to step up in solidarity with our fellow citizens of colour who daily face the same abuse.

An England that is tolerant, inclusive and diverse is not only possible, it already exists. Sadly, the bellicose forces of division and intolerance have louder voices on their side. But this last month has been a lesson in how we can overcome the boo boys if we stand together. As England squad member Reece James tweeted yesterday: we learn more about our society when we lose, far more than we learn when we win.

The question is whether we walk away in disgust at the stench created by the boorish minority, or roll up our sleeves and get stuck in to clearing this shit out of our society.”

Billy Bragg (Facebook)
 
Rio, Ashley, John? Who they?

A bunch of footballers who got into a major spat. AF (brother of RF) claimed JT made a racial comment to him during a game. JT starts to get a lot s*** from everywhere and everyone but not from AC who backs his teammate (JT). RF gets behind his bother (AF) and re-tweets a post that called AC a "choc ice" to AC. The FA (not a footballer) fined RF for improper conduct. RF claims his re-tweet was not racist. The FA also fined JT and banned him for 4 matches. JT goes to court to clear his name. The court obliged but the court of public opinion, minus nearly all Chelsea fans, wasn't having it.

Claro?
 
A bunch of footballers who got into a major spat. AF (brother of RF) claimed JT made a racial comment to him during a game. JT starts to get a lot s*** from everywhere and everyone but not from AC who backs his teammate (JT). RF gets behind his bother (AF) and re-tweets a post that called AC a "choc ice" to AC. The FA (not a footballer) fined RF for improper conduct. RF claims his re-tweet was not racist. The FA also fined JT and banned him for 4 matches. JT goes to court to clear his name. The court obliged but the court of public opinion, minus nearly all Chelsea fans, wasn't having it.

Claro?

I think so. Chelsea are the ones known as the Gooners, aren’t they?
 
A very good post by muso/activist Billy Bragg on Facebook. Hopefully he’d not object to my quoting it in its entirety:

“It saddens me to say it, but no one should be surprised at the outburst of racist abuse suffered by Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho and Bakayo Saka following England’s defeat by Italy on Sunday night. There had already been reports of the constant stream of racist invective directed at black team members throughout the tournament. While the rest of us were enjoying the feelgood factor of seeing an England men’s team succeed like no other has done since 1966, there were some who felt only bitterness at the sight of a multiracial expression of Englishness being lauded in the media.

Shamefully, the belligerent, bigoted few – and they are a few – felt justified in their prejudices because of the permissive signals they were given by politicians and pundits who were outraged that the team should seek to highlight the abuse suffered by people of colour. By taking a knee in solidarity with the victims of racism, the England team were forcing us to confront something many people in this country would rather not talk about.

Camilla Tominey expressed this preference for blinkers clearly in the Times on 9th July in an article headlined ‘The Euros have destroyed the Leftist myth of a backward, racist England’. One would hope that she and all those who questioned the validity of the players taking a knee now understand the vicious magnitude of the racism that our fellow citizens of colour face on a day to day basis.

Priti Patel’s comments in support of the boo boys and the failure of the Prime Minister to condemn their actions were also predictable. We live in a country where a TV station was recently launched with the specific aim of waging a ‘war on woke’. Although the term is never defined, it is clear from the programming that what GB News is at war with is empathy.

It’s easy to dismiss the ‘culture war’ agenda that turns a trivial matter like the removal of a picture of the Queen from a student’s common room into front page outrage, but we ignore it at our peril. Look closely at the battles that the culture warriors seek to stir up and you’ll see a white heterosexual status quo actively fighting a rearguard action against the progress we have made towards an inclusive, diverse society.

And we have made progress. A recent poll revealed that just 10% believe that you have to be white to be English, a number that would have been inconceivable 20 years ago. But the events of the past 48 hours prove that we can take none of it for granted. Racism can’t be defeated by a feelgood factor. It takes concerted efforts by the majority of fair-minded citizens to marginalise and ultimately change the mindset of the bigoted minority.

How do we do that? Well the first step is to refuse to cede the floor to the racists. It’s understandable that people looking at the behaviour of those few England fans would shake their heads and want nothing to do with the English identity, but that would be to betray the legacy of those lads who have shown us a different vision of what it means to be English.

For the past month, the white members of the England team have been taking the knee in solidarity with their black and mixed race colleagues who have been the target of racist abuse – and have continued to do so despite the vitriol aimed at them. Now it’s our turn to step up in solidarity with our fellow citizens of colour who daily face the same abuse.

An England that is tolerant, inclusive and diverse is not only possible, it already exists. Sadly, the bellicose forces of division and intolerance have louder voices on their side. But this last month has been a lesson in how we can overcome the boo boys if we stand together. As England squad member Reece James tweeted yesterday: we learn more about our society when we lose, far more than we learn when we win.

The question is whether we walk away in disgust at the stench created by the boorish minority, or roll up our sleeves and get stuck in to clearing this shit out of our society.”

Billy Bragg (Facebook)
“Permissive Signals” is the take away phrase from that.

Also good to see Bragg making the link between the war on woke and all the excuses for lazy racism. The Tories have started a war on woke, a Culture War, and the foe they’re declaring war on is anti racism. Their weapons are not great big guns and explosive statements, their weapons are the language of small but pervasive and constant permissive signals
 
Even Goody Baker, Lord of Brexit, has smelled public dissent and might be getting cold feet over his party’s permissive culture on racism.

“Labour has been granted an urgent question in parliament on Wednesday on racism on social media after the abuse faced by players following the Euro 2020 final, and Baker said: “This may be a decisive moment for our party.”

https://www.theguardian.com/politic...ude-on-taking-the-knee?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

which way will they jump?
 
“Labour has been granted an urgent question in parliament on Wednesday on racism on social media after the abuse faced by players following the Euro 2020 final, and Baker said: “This may be a decisive moment for our party.”

What’s the bet Labour screw it up and start demanding right-wing authoritarianism/control of social media companies rather than laying the blame where it rightfully belongs (racists, right-wing nationalism, dog-whistle politics etc etc)? I bet they are too cowardly to really call the Tories out on what they and their far-right tabloid press have fuelled for so many years now.
 
What’s the bet Labour screw it up and start demanding right-wing authoritarianism/control of social media companies rather than laying the blame where it rightfully belongs (racists, right-wing nationalism, dog-whistle politics etc etc)? I bet they are too cowardly to really call the Tories out on what they and their far-right tabloid press have fuelled for so many years now.

Angela Rayner is having a good go on Twitter for what that's worth.
 
Angela Rayner is having a good go on Twitter for what that's worth.

Just reading now, disturbing news about the Oldham councillor, Arooj Shar’s car getting firebombed a few hours ago (The Oldham Times).

PS Angela Rayner’s Twitter is very good, she’s speaking truth not the usual focus-group blandness and cowardice I expect from Labour.
 


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