Uncategorized Blog

Godwin Strikes Again

It’s Godwin’s Law season again. Here is AIG’s CEO Robert Benmosche spouting the sort of nonsense that reminds me of the pre-revolution French aristocracy.

“It’s a war,” Schwarzman said of the struggle with the administration over increasing taxes on private-equity firms. “It’s like when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939.”

I was in an off-the-record meeting with top Wall Street folks where similar comparisons to Nazi Germany were tossed around. It really was a meme on Wall Street that the singling out of the wealthy for criticism — and, more to the point, taxation — had a direct historical precedent in Nazi Germany, where the Jews were first demonized, then taxed, and then, well, you know. The sense was that the rich in general, and Wall Street in particular, weren’t just being criticized, but that they were being turned into a dangerously despised minority.

Robert Benmosche, if you want World War II comparisons for the pushback against the elites, how about the Normandy landings? With you in the role of the occupying Germans?

Meanwhile, back on this side of the Atlantic, up pops David Blunkett to remind me why I don’t vote Labour

Drawing a parallel with Germany before the rise of the Nazis, he suggested a loose moral climate had fed the paranoia and fear that had allowed Adolf Hitler to flourish.

“In the late 1920s and early 1930s, Berlin came as near as dammit to Sodom and Gomorrah. There was a disintegration of what you might call any kind of social order.

“People fed on that – they fed people’s fears of it. They encouraged their paranoia. They developed hate about people who had differences, who were minorities.

I’m going to propose a corrollary to Godwin’s Law. “Anyone who makes totally inappropriate comparisons with Nazi Germany is closer to the Nazis than their opponents

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Godfrey Bloom

I have to remind myself that Godfrey Bloom is not a character in a 1970s David Nobbs sitcom, but is someone real people have actually voted for.

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What Happened to the Leisure Society?

David Graeber, writing for Strike! Magazine asks what happened to the leisure society predicted a couple of generations ago.

In the year 1930, John Maynard Keynes predicted that, by century’s end, technology would have advanced sufficiently that countries like Great Britain or the United States would have achieved a 15-hour work week. There’s every reason to believe he was right. In technological terms, we are quite capable of this. And yet it didn’t happen. Instead, technology has been marshaled, if anything, to figure out ways to make us all work more. In order to achieve this, jobs have had to be created that are, effectively, pointless. Huge swathes of people, in Europe and North America in particular, spend their entire working lives performing tasks they secretly believe do not really need to be performed. The moral and spiritual damage that comes from this situation is profound. It is a scar across our collective soul. Yet virtually no one talks about it.

He’s talking of things like telemarketing, insurance sales, and large sections of corporate bureaucracies. And while the political right loves to talk about wasteful public-sector “non-jobs”, the private sector actually far worse.

And all this waste of human potential comes at the expense of the far better things that people would like to be able to do instead, as demonstrated by this anecdote about the career of an old school friend who had a brief but unsuccessful music career.

He was obviously brilliant, innovative, and his work had unquestionably brightened and improved the lives of people all over the world. Yet, after a couple of unsuccessful albums, he’d lost his contract, and plagued with debts and a newborn daughter, ended up, as he put it, “taking the default choice of so many directionless folk: law school.” Now he’s a corporate lawyer working in a prominent New York firm. He was the first to admit that his job was utterly meaningless, contributed nothing to the world, and, in his own estimation, should not really exist.

There’s a lot of questions one could ask here, starting with, what does it say about our society that it seems to generate an extremely limited demand for talented poet-musicians, but an apparently infinite demand for specialists in corporate law? (Answer: if 1% of the population controls most of the disposable wealth, what we call “the market” reflects what they think is useful or important, not anybody else.)

That anecdote hit home to me, when I think of the number of musicians I know who make their music during evenings and weekends, fitted around the demands of a day job. But it’s their out-of-hours music career that touches the lives of far more people.

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That Racist Van

Now that that infamous “Racist Van” with its crude “Immigrants go home” slogan has been reported to the Advertising Standards Authority, it’s left me wondering about the purpose behind the extraordinary behaviour from the Home Office over the past couple of weeks.

That racist van, the Gestapo-like “Your papers please” intimidation of non-white commuters at tube stations, and the stream of threatening messages in the Home Office Twitter feed all appeared to reflect a Tory party running scared of UKIP and desperately trying to woo back racist white voters.

But I don’t think it’s a coincidence that this all happened the week David Cameron was away and left Deputy PM Nick Clegg minding the shop. The whole think reeks of an ambush by the Tory right to stitch up him and his party, and put him in a position where he couldn’t win whatever he said or did.

It reminds me of the time the odious Michael Howard left his deputy Ann Widdecombe to defend a prisoner having to give birth in chains. She would have her revenge with her “Something of the night” comment that torpedoed his leadership bid.

Will the Liberal Democrats have their own “Something of the Night” moment, perhaps during the next election campaign? We can but hope, even though we may be hoping in vain.

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Dawkins, Islam, Bigotry and Racism

It’s depressing to watch Richard Dawkins’ fanboys trying to defend his recent words about Islam on the grounds what he’s saying isn’t technically racism. Surely if the same words were to come out of the mouths of established bigots like Nick Griffin, Geert Wilders or Pamela Gellar they’d rightly be condemned as hate speech. It makes you wonder how many of them share his bigotry, or whether there’s some cognitive dissonance in play here.

When somebody singles out and demonises a religion that just happens, in the UK at least, to be practiced largely by non-white immigrant communities it’s splitting hairs to argue whether it’s racism or not. Whatever it is or isn’t, the one thing it is doing is furthering the agenda of the far right, and this is precisely the point many mainstream commentators I’ve read have been making.

It’s disappointing that so many people who are not by any stretch of the imagination fellow travellers of the far right fail to see this.

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Martin Niemoller, Godwin’s Law and Projection

We’re all familiar with that Martin Niemoller quote.

First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out, because I was not a Socialist.

Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak out, because I was not a Trade Unionist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out, because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for me–and there was no one left to speak for me.

Sadly I see this quoted more often nowadays by right-wing groups directed at opponents who represent the very opposite to the values of Nazi Germany. When it’s used by the fraudulently-named “Anglican Mainstream“, who are little more than a single-issue homophobic hate group who in no way represent the mainstream of Anglicanism, it’s stomach-churningy offensive.

I think it’s well past time to call Godwin on such toxic misrepresentation of Niemoller; when you’re effectively calling your opponents Nazis, it’s a sure sign you’ve lost the argument.

It’s a classic case of projection, something very common on the far right. I’m guessing their mindset works on the basis that everyone’s motivation is the same as their own. So those of us who believe LGBT folks deserve to be treated equally are motivated not by empathy towards fellow human beings but by an elimationist hatred of “Traditional Christians”. Complete nonsense, of course, but that does seem to be the way they think.

It’s the same mindset that leads white supremacists to claim they’re equivalent to minorities celebrating their own cultures or daring to demand equal rights with the rest of us. Or global warming deniers claiming that all scientists presenting evidence of global warming are just spinning conspiracy theories and shilling for vested interests simply because that’s the way the rightwing pundit world works.

Of course, the whole “liberal fascist” meme encapsulates this projection in just two words…

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Are they making it up as they go along?

Tories Lorem Ipsum screenshot

“We’ll tell you what our policy is once we’ve finished the website”

Oops…

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Exodus International to Shut Down

In previous blog posts, I have made comparisons with the way some conservative Christians cherry-pick scripture to support homophobia with the South African Dutch Reformed Church’s support of Aparthied. Exodus International have followed the lead of the Dutch Reformed Church, and publicly repented.

“Exodus is an institution in the conservative Christian world, but we’ve ceased to be a living, breathing organism,” said Alan Chambers, President of Exodus. “For quite some time we’ve been imprisoned in a worldview that’s neither honoring toward our fellow human beings, nor biblical.”

Chambers continued: “From a Judeo-Christian perspective, gay, straight or otherwise, we’re all prodigal sons and daughters. Exodus International is the prodigal’s older brother, trying to impose its will on God’s promises, and make judgments on who’s worthy of His Kingdom. God is calling us to be the Father – to welcome everyone, to love unhindered.”

Whatever wrongs they may have committed in the past, to publicly admit being wrong and recanting in this way is a very courageous move, and deserves to be applauded.

Luke 15 verse 7 is appropriate here, I think.

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If you’ve done nothing wrong, you still have something to fear

The argument made by William Hague that “If you’ve done nothing wrong, you have nothing to fear” is typical of those who see George Orwell’s 1984 not as prophecy or warning, but as an instruction manual. The whole line is, to pardon my French, bullshit.

As John D Cook expains, no system is perfect, and the false positives that will inevitably happen can seriously mess up your life.

Suppose the probability of a correctly analyzing an email or phone call is not 100% but 99.99%. In other words, there’s one chance in 10,000 of an innocent message being incriminating. Imagine authorities analyzing one message each from 300,000,000 people, roughly the population of the United States. Then around 30,000 innocent people will have some ‘splaining to do. They will have to interrupt their dinner to answer questions from an agent knocking on their door, or maybe they’ll spend a few weeks in custody. If the legal system is 99.99% reliable, then three of them will go to prison.

But it’s not the knock at the door in the middle of the night that’s to be feared. The real danger is more subtle, as Ian Brown explains in The Guardian .

Data mining tools have developed quickly over the past decade, and a detailed picture can now be painted of people’s lives with even small amounts of such information. This picture can ultimately have real-world consequences. Ever had problems getting an electronic visa to travel to countries such as the US and Australia, who pre-screen foreign visitors, or had to go through lengthy additional security at the airport? Thought about getting a job with a government agency or contractor that will do background checks first? Or perhaps you’ve had difficulty getting medical insurance or credit despite a healthy lifestyle and prompt payment of your bills?

Have people forgotten the Secret Service raid on Steve Jackson Games? How much do you trust security bureaucrats to be able to tell the different between, say, PBeM postings and genuine terrorist plots? And just as significantly, how much do you trust them never to power-trip by messing up your life just because they can get away with it?

And that’s before we ever look at the possibilty that Prism and other similar privacy-invading data mining is purely to going to be used to stop terrorism, and isn’t going to expand in scope to snoop on any purely legal political activity that might threaten the percieved economic interests of the elites.

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Google, Ayn Rand, and The Singularity

Bryan Appleyard asks Google’s Eric Schmidt some questions, and doesn’t like the sound of the answers. They raise some uncomfortable questions about Silicon Valley’s attitude towards law, privacy, the “excremental novelist and infantile philosopher Ayn Rand“, and the quasi-religious belief in The Singularity.

The Singularity, Ayn Rand, the elitism, the moral pretensions and the dreams of island states are all sending the same message – that Silicon Valley is a small, highly intelligent, obsessive, hubristic and deluded community. Its values are not ours. We should, of course, embrace its ingenuity and the gadgets it showers upon us, but we should be wary of the ‘terms and conditions’ attached. These include not just the inane legalisms that come with the software, but also the ideology, the rhetoric, the world-dominating fantasies and, of course, the tax avoidance.

Google is just another company with just another bottom line. We should take note of it but we should not demean ourselves by ushering it into our centres of democratic power and we should certainly not succumb to its delusions. We should merely, if the occasion arises, scrounge an invite to Loulou’s and have a good laugh.

Which all seems to suggest Google’s attitude towards tax-dodging is just the tip of the iceberg. As one commenter points out, not everyone in Silicon Valley shares these crackpot beliefs.It’s also true that the sociopathic values of Ayn Rand are commonplace amongst the elites. But it ought to make is question whether these are the sorts of people we want to trust with out future.

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