Monday 28 March 2011

Anarchy in the UK

I was rather too young (one, in fact) to remember the Sex Pistols singing Anarchy in the UK, and even if I could remember it, I 'm pretty sure that I was a placid baby and therefore wouldn't have been stirred to acts of wonton destruction in the name of Anarchy. Even now, the song strikes me as very School band-ish, and the most subversive and daring thing about it is the attempt to rhyme Antichrist with anarchist (or anarch-iste, as John Lydon strains to put it). The fact that he's lately been seen advertising butter, and appearing on itv flagship reality TV goes to show that it's tricky to remain an anarch-iste all your life, and maybe we've all got to grow up sooner or later.

Incidentally, an anarchist is defined as follows:

a person who advocates the abolition of government and a social system based on voluntary cooperation

The reason I've waffled on about this is as a result of the riots in Piccadilly at the weekend. This was nominally a protest march about government cuts, though it seems to have been split into two parts, with the Milliband-approved quiet protest (and if there's ever a voice more soporific to calm a protest, I'd like to hear it) and the subsequent more radical anarchistic protest.

Let's look at them in a little more detail:

Protest 1: peaceful, clear purpose, organised, involved people exercising their democratic right.

Protest 2: violent, not quite sure what the point was, chaotic, criminal damage, fighting with police.

The first protest involved people intent on making their feelings known to the coalition government. There's a certain amount of courage required for this, and a desire to stand up for one's beliefs. These people wanted to be seen, they were happy to show their faces and for their point to be made, forcibly and fairly.

The second protest involved people intent on smashing things up. This involved smashing banks, and taking over the roof of Fortnum and Mason. This second act was particularly bizarre, bearing in mind that you only have to walk through the front door and there's pretty much a free lunch to be had at their food hall, given the number of tasty morsels on display. What's on the roof to eat? Bird shit? How very anarchistic.

The fact that these people refused to show their faces meant that they were clearly intent on criminal activity from the outset. Just what point is being made by throwing paint at the police? What point is being made by smashing the window of a bank? Surely the point is that you like smashing things, hence you are anti-social, poorly brought up and with worrying issues of anger. You are also of course a massive coward, since you would presumably not do this sort of thing without the cover of a large mob behind you. It really is amazing how some of the meekest people develop a brave/stupid/violent mentality with the protection of a crowd. The daubing of the anarchist symbol was surely more about the fact that it looks quite cool than any actual political statement. It's hard to see how a 'social system based on voluntary co-operation' can be achieved by sticking a table leg through the front window of Millett's.

Part of the problem with protesting is that it seems to be becoming a social day out, and less about the reason behind the protest than the sheer joy of protesting itself. I remeber being invited to protest in Hyde park for the first Iraq war, and was told to come along because it would be fun, and 'after all, it's such a nice day for a walk'. A walk!? So that's how we get more people to protest. Make sure it's a sunny day, thrown in a park and a stroll past a cheeky deli, and you'll have the great and the good of Hampstead screaming for the abolition of speed humps in no time.

Perhaps I'm becoming old and miserable, and maybe I've always been somewhat institutionalised (public School, university, public School isn't the greatest sight of the real world), but it does seem as though there's none more misguided than the anarchistes these days. Bob Dylan would be turning in his grave (have you not seen my dead pool, Bob?)

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