Britain: the depth of corruption
John Pilger
May 28, 2009
The theft of public money by members of parliament, including government
ministers, has given Britons a rare glimpse inside the tent of power and
privilege. It is rare because not one political reporter or commentator, those
who fill tombstones of column inches and dominate broadcast journalism, revealed
a shred of this scandal. It was left to a public relations man to sell the
“leak”. Why?
The answer lies in a deeper corruption, which tales of tax evasion and phantom
mortgages touch upon but also conceal. Since Margaret Thatcher, British
parliamentary democracy has been progressively destroyed as the two main parties
have converged into a single-ideology business state, each with almost identical
social, economic and foreign policies. This “project” was completed by Tony
Blair and Gordon Brown, inspired by the political monoculture of the United
States. That so many Labour and Tory politicians are now revealed as personally
crooked is no more than a metaphor for the anti-democratic system they have
forged together.
Their accomplices have been those journalists who report Parliament as "lobby
correspondents" and their editors, who have “played the game” wilfully, and have
deluded the public (and sometimes themselves) that vital, democratic differences
exist between the parties. Media-designed opinion polls based on absurdly small
samplings, along with a tsunami of comment on personalities and their specious
crises, have reduced the “national conversation” to a series of media events, in
which the withdrawal of popular consent – as the historically low electoral
turnouts under Blair demonstrated – has been abused as apathy.
Having fixed the boundaries of political debate and possibility, self-important
paladins, notably liberals, promoted the naked emperor Blair and championed his
“values” that would allow “the mind [to] range in search of a better Britain”.
And when the bloodstains showed, they ran for cover. All of it had been, as
Larry David once described an erstwhile crony, “a babbling brook of bullshit”.
How contrite their former heroes now seem. On 17 May, the Leader of the House of
Commons, Harriet Harman, who is alleged to have spent £10,000 of taxpayers’
money on “media training”, called on MPs to “rebuild cross-party trust”. The
unintended irony of her words recalls one of her first acts as social security
secretary more than a decade ago – cutting the benefits of single mothers. This
was spun and reported as if there was a “revolt” among Labour backbenchers,
which was false. None of Blair’s new female MPs, who had been elected “to end
male-dominated, Conservative policies”, spoke up against this attack on the
poorest of poor women. All voted for it.
The same was true of the lawless attack on Iraq in 2003, behind which the
cross-party Establishment and the political media rallied. Andrew Marr stood in
Downing Street and excitedly told BBC viewers that Blair had “said they would be
able to take Baghdad without a bloodbath, and that in the end the Iraqis would
be celebrating. And on both of those points he has been proved conclusively
right.” When Blair’s army finally retreated from Basra in May, it left behind,
according to scholarly estimates, more than a million people dead, a majority of
stricken, sick children, a contaminated water supply, a crippled energy grid and
four million refugees.
As for the “celebrating” Iraqis, the vast majority, say Whitehall’s own surveys,
want the invader out. And when Blair finally departed the House of Commons, MPs
gave him a standing ovation – they who had refused to hold a vote on his
criminal invasion or even to set up an inquiry into its lies, which almost
three-quarters of the British population wanted.
Such venality goes far beyond the greed of the uppity Hazel Blears.
“Normalising the unthinkable”, Edward Herman’s phrase from his essay The
Banality of Evil, about the division of labour in state crime, is applicable
here. On 18 May, the Guardian devoted the top of one page to a report headlined,
“Blair awarded $1m prize for international relations work”. This prize,
announced in Israel soon after the Gaza massacre, was for his “cultural and
social impact on the world”. You looked in vain for evidence of a spoof or some
recognition of the truth. Instead, there was his “optimism about the chance of
bringing peace” and his work “designed to forge peace”.
This was the same Blair who committed the same crime – deliberately planning the
invasion of a country, “the supreme international crime” – for which the Nazi
foreign minister Joachim von Ribbentrop was hanged at Nuremberg after proof of
his guilt was located in German cabinet documents. Last February, Britain’s
“Justice” Secretary, Jack Straw, blocked publication of crucial cabinet minutes
from March 2003 about the planning of the invasion of Iraq, even though the
Information Commissioner, Richard Thomas, has ordered their release. For Blair,
the unthinkable is both normalised and celebrated.
“How our corrupt MPs are playing into the hands of extremists,” said the cover
of last week’s New Statesman. But is not their support for the epic crime in
Iraq already extremism? And for the murderous imperial adventure in Afghanistan?
And for the government’s collusion with torture?
It is as if our public language has finally become Orwellian. Using totalitarian
laws approved by a majority of MPs, the police have set up secretive units to
combat democratic dissent they call “extremism”. Their de facto partners are
“security” journalists, a recent breed of state or “lobby” propagandist. On 9
April, the BBC’s Newsnight programme promoted the guilt of 12 “terrorists”
arrested in a contrived media drama orchestrated by the Prime Minister himself.
All were later released without charge.
Something is changing in Britain that gives cause for optimism. The British
people have probably never been more politically aware and prepared to clear out
decrepit myths and other rubbish while stepping angrily over the babbling brook
of bullshit.
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