Monday 25 April 2011

Top of the class




Mary Anne Seighart’s article in the Independent - “Cameron's betrayal of the middle class” - pushes the boundaries of neoliberal individualism far beyond the pale.

Sieghart forwards the argument that the middle classes are being educationally marginalized by modern society. She links this to 'working-class' problems such as immigration using the same ill-informed, narrow-minded reporting one would expect to find in such fear-propelling tabloids as the Daily Mail and the Daily Express. The Independent's decision to publish such an article allows the frail arguments to be challenged.

Firstly, Seighart’s views on education stem from the most elitist position possible. There is no questioning of the inequality that seeps from every pore of the education system as explained in my blog post last year.

Seighart argues that a small minority of university places may soon be taken by pupils from poorer backgrounds as “admissions officers will have to take into account the average GCSE and A-level results of the candidate's school”. This will, in her opinion, lead to a situation where “the better a school does in the league tables, the lower its chances of getting its pupils into a good university.” The assertion that the poorer the school attended by a pupil the greater chance they have of accessing higher education flies in the face of any understanding of Britain’s education system. The system rigged in many ways to favor those with more power and influence. Private, faith and grammar schools are much better at endowing pupils with a better education and thus a better future. Seighart seems to ignore the fact that a child born in a poor area is far too often left with no option but to attend a poor school with poor behaviour records and poor teachers, resulting in poor grades and a poor future.

The ‘choice’ of a better education and way of life is halted for these children on the day they are born. Yet Seighart ignores this horrendous gap in equality by worrying about positive discrimination. Surely though, dealing with real discrimination - rather than its weaker positive form - is the key to a better system? And if this poor system is now levying ever so slightly in favour of an incredibly small minority of pupils - discriminated against from birth - then it seems a relatively minor infringement to rage against.

Seighart however takes this rage one step further and espouses that “for every poor student who wins a place, a middle-class student will fail to. For parents whose chief goal for their children has always been to get them into a high-ranking university, this will be seen as catastrophic.” There is no doubt that a smidgen of parents who have funded their child's education may find their efforts thwarted, but this again only highlights the flaws of a system that allows this unhealthy tactic to prevail.

Parents are given far too much say in the quality and whereabouts of their child’s education and, because we live in an unequal society, this creates an unequal system. Those with the most power benefit. Children are born not into a democratic but a feudal education system. Yet again though, Seighart seems unaware or incapable of peering into the vast abyss of this inequality. She is more concerned about those who have more and may lose out, rather than those have have nothing and lose all the time.

The only system failure Seighart attacks are the league tables. She states “Perverse incentives driven by league tables are what have got us into this mess….and neglect the brighter ones who are going to pass anyway.” Again she forgets to state the case of pupils at the bottom of the pile. In this case neglected for not being bright enough to attain 5 A-C grades and thus left on the scrap heap alongside many of the 1 million youth unemployed. They leave schools without skills straight into unemployment. It also escapes Seighart’s notice that it is the competition created by the league table system, to allow middle-class parents greater choice, which is the problem. This paradox is all the more potent as it seems to have only gained her notice as middle-class children now face the smallest chink in their weighted educational armory. There is no mention of the problems facing poorer children.

In order to try and gain support for this apparent loss of middle-class liberty Seighart argues that “An Oxford professor was moaning to me the other day that many of the brightest Oxbridge rejects will go off to American universities.” The brain drain argument is one of the oldest anti-tax, anti-social change arguments and it seems in recent years to be back in vogue trying to spread fear about equality to those who have most to lose by its appearance.

To make matters worse, Seighart doesn’t stop at trying to spread fear among the wealthier members of society. She then tries to transform middle-class irritation at the meekest attempt at educational equality into societal bigotry and hatred of the oldest kind; hatred of immigration and foreigners.

She claims “Nothing makes people angrier than losing their position in the world to someone they feel deserves it less. We've seen the wrath of the white working classes over losing their jobs and their council flats to immigrants.” Here Seighart fails to understand how working-class ‘wrath’ over unemployment and council flats is actually a symptom of neoliberal capitalist policies, so cleverly disguised by the right to create racial bigotry and ideas of ‘indigenous’ superiority. Add that in with the assertion that Britain is somehow a meritocratcic society in which the ‘deserving’ prosper and presumably the undeserving fail and one cannot help but be staggered by the writer’s inability to view a modern Britain in which “The wealthiest 1 per cent owned approximately a fifth of the UK's marketable wealth in 2003. In contrast, half the population shared only 7 per cent of total wealth.

This dogma is then carried into racist fervor with the statement that “Barking and Dagenham will never again be white working-class suburbs where neighbours have known each other all their lives. Maybe that's inevitable, but it still hurts.” How the colour of someone’s skin can hurt or what’s to be done about a lack of jobs, housing and education is not explained. It highlights how, in order to justify any form of inequality, sweeping and unacceptable comments of the most racial nature have to be made.

These opinions seem to stem from Seighart's real fear. The fear of a loss of her middle-class power: “What it comes down to is that we're all in favor of upward mobility, but nobody likes its obverse.” It seems to Seighart that social mobility is a one way street, bottom to top, with those at the bottom trying hard to achieve more while those at the top remain unchallenged. For too many years this attitude has prevailed in the British media with a lack of support for full employment, higher wages and higher income taxation.

Our education system – one of the UK’s oldest public institutions – is under attack from an increasingly ferocious right-wing government. Sieghart – by resorting to xenophobia of the most epic proportions – confirms that neoliberalism and conservatism can only lead to greater inequality.

Wednesday 20 April 2011

Stuck in the middle with you

The Tory - Lib Dem coalition crystallises a monumental and frightening shift in British politics. Prior to the General Election last year there was a misplaced belief that the combined support for Labour and the Lib Dems represented a 'progressive consensus'. The acts of the government – spawned from the policies of New Labour – show that this is clearly untrue. The consensus which prevails is that of individualism, competition and marketisation. This right-wing swing means it's absolutely crucial that those on the left oppose the Alternative Vote – and the Lib Dems, by showing their true colours, are the ones to blame.

The arguments forwarded by the anti-AV brigade are largely flawed and self-defeating. Mehdi Hasan produced a terrific critique in the latest New Statesman:
The Alternative Vote isn't a foreign system. From trade unions to workplace committees, professional societies to student groups, millions of Britons already have experience of voting under AV. It doesn't require expensive voting machines, or cost £250m ... AV isn't a "confusing system" (David Cameron) or "fiendishly complicated" (Daily Mail). If the Australians can manage to rank candidates in a 1-2-3 order, so can we. AV doesn't automatically result in hung parliaments: over the past 100 years, Australia has had fewer hung parliaments under AV than the UK has had under FPTP. Meanwhile, Canada, despite using FPTP, has been beset by hung parliaments in recent years.
The arguments forwarded by the No to AV campaign are largely uninspiring because they are extolled by reactionary and conservative Westminster traditionalists. Arguments of complication and cost are largely irrelevant in terms of electoral reform and we should strive for a genuinely proportional system whatever the intellectual or financial cost. However AV is not a proportional system and – whatever the outcome of the referendum – it will delay moves to proportional representation. Furthermore – and by far the most compelling argument against AV – it will further entrench a centripetal party system which is becoming increasingly bland, centralised and uninspiring.

The key argument against AV is that – far from increasing choice – AV acts to eliminate differences between parties and, therefore, reduces choice. Parties are forced to compete for second preference votes and this, inevitably, blunts radicalism and forces parties to compete for the centre ground. The coalition has forced the shift of the political playground to the right and, as a result, Labour will have to further reconfigure their policies in line with market forces in order to win second preference votes from Tories and Lib Dems. For this reason – and to ensure Labour doesn't slip further to the right – the Alternative Vote should be opposed by socialists and progressives and we should champion a genuinely proportional system.

AV is not about increasing representation or democratisation, it is about ensuring the supremacy of liberal individualism and marketisation. We stand at a political crossroads: the expenses scandal – coupled with the Lib Dems' public sacrifice of manifesto commitments – has eroded people's faith in government; the organised labour movement – facing an unprecedented assault on public services – is reawakening from its slumber to lead the fightback. It is hoped that AV will be a political apathy panacea but, in the long term, by encouraging the convergence of party politics, the erosion of public support in government will be even greater.

Prior to the General Election, Nick Clegg described the Alternative Vote as "a miserable little compromise" (NB: he may have been describing himself). It pains me to say it but, with regards to that quote, I agree with Nick.


Sunday 17 April 2011

Scientific Progress or Animal Cruelty?

What comes to mind when I say Oxford University? World-class research? Quaint historic colleges? Privately-educated posh kids? A lack of ethnic diversity?

How about animal rights protests? I wouldn’t have thought of it either, until I happened to walk down South Parks Road on a Thursday afternoon. I was quite surprised to see about ten animal rights campaigners (and a policeman) stood outside the Plant Sciences department, demonstrating against the university’s “cruelty against animals”. I was curious, so stopped to have a talk with them.

They explained the building across the road houses over 150,000 animals that are experimented on each year in the name of scientific research; that healthy primates are subjected to deep-brain stimulation amongst other intrusive and harmful experiments; that the research carried out is to satisfy scientific curiosity that does not necessarily apply to human conditions. I was given a mass of leaflets to back up these claims, including references to published research from the university. Some of it makes pretty horrific reading – e.g. healthy monkeys undergoing invasive brain surgery to intentionally cause brain damage.

The protesters also told me they are are only able to protest for 4 hours on a Thursday afternoon following a high court injunction taken out against them by the university. So why are they perceived as such a nuisance or threat?

The “building across the road” was the controversial £18m Biomedical Sciences building. Only after the protesters told me what happened inside, did I notice the deterrents over the manhole covers and CCTV outside the building. The building was designed to replace numerous animal laboratories around the city, and house all animals used for experiments in this new “world-class” facility.

The opening of the “controversial” Biomedical Sciences building attracted attention from national media outlets such as the Guardian and BBC. It’s perhaps not surprising considering the building’s history. Construction began in 2003, but halted a year later after the building contractor Walter Lilly & Co, pulled out after receiving threats from animal rights groups. Following the injunction against protesters, work resumed a year later, and was completed in late 2008.

The university claims the facility tests new treatments for cancer, leukaemia, heart disease, HIV, arthritis and diabetes. It also says that animals can be used only if experiments with cells or computer models are deemed inappropriate.

Unecessary cruelty or necessary research, the debate will continue.

Friday 15 April 2011

If in Doubt Blame Foreigners


Now that bombing foreigners in Libya has not stemmed the reaction against the cuts and NHS reforms, David Cameron seems intent on attacking them at home as well. In a speech to party members in Hampshire the Prime Minister delivered a carefully worded speech aimed at immigrants but with a subtext that blamed the welfare state.

Immigration is not really a vote winner for an incumbent. In fact, it’s a poisoned chalice. It’s difficult to attack the issue without sounding remarkably similar to extremists like the BNP. Cameron tried to avoid this label stating that he wished reduce immigration to starve the BNP of the oxygen of public anxiety that they thrive on. That’s kind of like saying that killing Jewish people is useful because it reduces Nazi party support. Well yes, if you do what another party want they lose their raison d'etre to a certain extent.

Another difficulty with the issue is that you can’t really satisfy those who are already angry without mass deportation, which is not an option. Plus there is nothing that can be done about European immigration anyway.

It’s clear that this isn’t really about immigration but an attempt to gain further justification to attack welfare. By saying that “migrants have been filling gaps in the labour market left wide open by a welfare system that for years has paid British people not to work. That is where the blames lies, at the door of our woeful welfare system” Cameron is clearly trying to find another avenue for attack.

Sunday 10 April 2011

Solidarity


There has been much debate here and elsewhere about the tactics different groups are using to oppose the government. Should you condemn the destruction of property as occurred on the 26th of March? Have UK Uncut’s actions really been successful in promoting an anti-cuts agenda? Does tackling the one issue of cuts go far enough when really you oppose the whole system that allowed this right wing administration to exist?

The aim of the left during this government’s term should be to silently support a multitude of actions attacking the right. For many reasons the left have become seen as unelectable since the 1980s. Tony Blair was elected into government with a manifesto that promised to adhere to Conservative budget planning for the first two years in power. The left has everything to win by a multilevel attack on government and everything to lose by visibly debating the best way to do it.

Lucy Annson from UK Uncut on Newsnight refused to be trapped into attacking others direct action. By stressing that young and old participate in their action she demonstrated that there are many ways to act. In the Newsnight footage they claim that the majority of the march was overshadowed which has caused many to claim it as “an own goal”. No, what happened is that the media decided to focus on the actions of a few and then claim that their focus meant the rest of the march was over looked. This point would mean that there is only a finite amount of news space dedicated to the march in general which is untrue. The people who marched created news, UK Uncut created more and those who smashed windows created even more. All this means there was a bigger impact overall surely.

Therefore, none of the above questions matter. There does not need to be a consensus or agreement on actions. Would I ever adopt black bloc tactics, mask up and throw a brick at a window? No. Do I think that the fact that every time there is a Conservative government there are violent clashes that helps the left? Yes I do.

Monday 4 April 2011

The Bay of Pigs - The First Defeat of U.S. Imperialism

Fifty years ago US-backed mercenaries invaded the Bay of Pigs (Playa Giron) but were swiftly defeated by Cuban forces in what is widely recognised as "the first defeat of U.S imperialism in America". To commemorate the victory I have written a feature on the invasion for the Morning Star which can be read here.