BEYOND THE iMPLODE: 9 THINGS I HATE ABOUT ANTI-NAZI MARCHES IN LONDON
A timely intervention from Martin!
BEYOND THE iMPLODE: 9 THINGS I HATE ABOUT ANTI-NAZI MARCHES IN LONDON
A timely intervention from Martin!
Dave Stelfox guesting on DJ /Rupture’s Mudd Up show on WFMU last night. Check the audio and playlist here:
Lots of discussion of UK fast chat.
Actually, don’t go out of your way to smash them. They are tiny these days and have been completely eclipsed by the more sophisticated British National Party.
In the mid-70s, though, the NF were a force to be reckoned with, both electorally and on the streets. Which naturally put the wind up a lot of people.
For liberals the NF became a sociological problem which needed to be explained and dealt with. For some others the problems created by popular fascism were more immediate. My focus here is mainly on the former.
Martin Walker – The National Front (Fontana, 1977)
Walker was a Guardian journalist who managed to interview a surprisingly large section of the UK far right in the mid 70s. The book is therefore a pretty good resource for insights into the internal politics and mechanisms of the party. It also includes some great bitchiness about different factions which is always great to read, eh?
I found this especially worthwhile for the detailed look a the NF’s formation out of various strands on the far right – former Blackshirts, “empire loyalists”, community groups opposed to immigration, sections of the Tory “Monday Club” and outright neo-nazis.
Whilst the subject matter is obviously quite grim there are some hilarious asides, my favourite being some disgruntled NF members who were kept waiting for two hours during their first visit to Germany while John Tyndall ponced about in a shoe shop trying for find the most nazi-looking jack boots to buy.
Michael Billig – Fascists: A Social Psychological View of The National Front (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978)
Billig was a lecturer in psychology at Birmingham University when he wrote this interesting book. It is perhaps a little too academic in tone for some, but is actually clearly and insightfully written, especially when compared to some of the convoluted pomo gibberish which passes for academic literature these days.
There are three sections to the book:
The first part looks at various methods which have been used to analyse “the fascist personality”, including Adorno, Reich and especially Fromm’s “F Scale” of authoritarianism/fascism. Whilst there is some merit in this approach, Billig is clear about its limitations. It should be blindly obvious to anyone with a vague interest in extreme politics that people are attracted to ideologies and political organisations for a whole host of reasons including status and the social.
The psychological approach towards analysing poltiical activists can also be used to demonise one’s enemies – it’s a technique used just as much against anarchists and communists by the mainstream media as with the far right. Demonisation may make people feel like they have the moral high ground but that isn’t a useful tool in the fight against fascism. Understanding why people are drawn towards far right groups can be a key factor in preventing this happening or providing an anti-fascist alternative.
The second section examines the ideology of the National Front with particular reference to its publications. I found Billig’s meticulous analysis of John Tyndall’s Spearhead magazine especially useful. He charts the rag’s development from independent pro-Hitlerian organ to an official NF journal which was outwardly racist but not nazi. Billig is adept at uncovering the coding at the heart of the “respectable” facade which allows fascists to retain their virulent anti-semitism by substituting phrases like “rootless cosmopolitan bankers” for “jews”. Of course this is now widely known but I haven’t seen it explained as well anywhere else.
Also included is a cogent overview of the NF’s use of IQ and Race theories to bolster their prejudice. This material also formed the basis for Billig’s Psychology, Racism & Fascism pamphlet which I have previously mentioned here.
The final section of the book concerns interviews with several National Front members, with transcripts.
Searchlight – From Ballots To Bombs: The Inside Story of The National Front’s Political Soldiers (Searchlight, 1989)
Pamphlet covering the weirder ideological developments of the NF in the mid 80s. I.e. toadying up to Gaddaffi, trying to be mates with the Nation of Islam in Hackney, etc. Fascists desperately scurrying around trying to find some new ideas when the electoral route didn’t pan out (their ideas ripped off by the tories, the cultural war lost to the anti-nazi league, and John Tyndall grossly over reaching what the party was capable of in the 1979 elections and nearly bankrupting them in the process). This era saw the front moving increasingly towards elitism and terrorism when it became clear how marginal they were. A salutary lesson in how fascism operates in different ways at different points in history – and that this requires different tactics.
After the introduction, the format used is a bunch of autobiographies of people who became disatisfied with their involvement with far right politics. The “people” are composites though, which opens the door to a whole can of worms about the role of Searchlight’s contacts and infiltrators, the organisation’s pride in its relationship with the police and the secret state, and more basic issues about whether the booklet is propaganda or investigation.
Still worth a read if you’ve been following the furore about Tony Wakeford (and his associates such as Richard Lawson) and their involvement with the NF during this period.
Part Two will follow next week.
Interesting recent interview with the reformed Flux over at expletive undeleted.
I suppose the main themes are how time and growing older give you some perspective, but also the vilification of Derek Birkett – the member of the band who went on to run the now very large One Little Indian Records.
As I said here, I found Flux’s later work more intriguing than their earlier punkier material. So slightly depressing to see the rest of the band dismissing that as solely down to Birkett. And also a bit odd as the “Uncarved Block” album featured collaborations with On-U Sound people, and singer Col Latter’s side project Hotalacio was produced by Keith LeBlanc.
And some of the things they rail against these days are a load of bollocks as well…
A couple of nice events coming up in Stoke Newington:
‘PRESSURE DROP!’ LAUNCH PARTY!!!
Friday 19th September
(& 3rd Friday of every month)
@ THE OTHERS
Top floor
6-8 Manor Road
London
N16
020 8802 3755
info@theothers.uk.com
Doors: 8pm til 2am
Gate pressure: £3 before 11pm / £5 after
Music Policy: Scorchin’ Ska, Rockin’ Reggae, Bubblin’ Blue Beat, Raw Roots & Dangerous Dub!!!
Residents: Gladdy Wax & Mistah Brown
Guest selectas: Alan McKay & Tim “Bilko” Wells
Expect the wickedest Jamdown sounds ever to grace a pair of turntables, as legendary sound system veteran GLADDY WAX, joins forces with Tighten Up’s MISTAH BROWN to launch – “PRESSURE DROP” – a brand spanking new Ska & Reggae happening in the heart of Stoke Newington!!!
Gladdy will be bringing his usual relentless energy, incredible musical knowledge and phenomenal vinyl museum to the proceedings whilst Mistah Brown attempts to tear the roof off the place with crowd-pleasing classics galore!!! Joining us for our launch will be our old muckers – “local boy made good-ish” – TIM “BILKO” WELLS – paying tribute to his late, great musical heroes – Joe Gibbs & General Echo – plus Camden Town’s finest – ALAN McKAY – dropping a non-stop, no-nonsense “Roots-Rocksteady” selection!!! You cant say fairer than that!!!
REACH!!!
More info check: mistahbrown@hotmail.com / info@theothers.uk.com / www.reggaeunlimited.com
Vibescreator & The Vibes presents
A Night of Musical Upliftment and Entertainment
Cease And Settle
basement sessions
REGGAE ROOTS DUB
…from way back in the day to present time
from Jamaica to UK and beyond…
Selectors:
Flo (resident)
Peter Vibes (resident)
Crofton (I-ality Soundsystem)
Jagu & Beez (Fable Soundsystem)
+ MC Stamina Li
And Surprise Guests…
Saturday 27th September 2008
at 58 Stoke Newington Road, 9pm to late, FREE entry all night…
Reach early to be sure to get in! Dance will finish when its done.
Strictly good behaviour. Nice bar prices. Smoking available.
Everyone Welcome!
We featured Young Dot in Woofah issue 1’s feature on upcoming Grime MCs, but we missed something then which fits so nicely into the Woofah worldview that I’m kicking myself now.
Young Dot subsequently mutated into Dot Rotten, and killed off his former incarnation with the excellent “RIP Young Dot” mixtape. It’s one of my favourite grime releases of the year so far, resolutely sinister, downbeat and almost veering into the gothic territory of Wu-Tang.
After I’d played the CD a few times I checked the sleevenotes, and there it was:
“Special Thanks To Dennis Rowe”
I froze. And smiled. WIDE.
Dennis Rowe… fuck. Dennis Rowe is the don – manager of Saxon Studio International, UK soundsystem legend. The man who oversaw the first serious outbreak of the UK MC virus.
Was it the same one? How did that happen? So many questions.
Fortunately the man like Blackdown has answers – in this extenisive interview with Dot Rotten.
I’m not gonna post the juicy bits here, check out the whole thing…
Roll Deep - "black group" or "white group"?
by Dan Hancox
Some of the (text) contents of Datacide issue 9 have been placed online, including the crucial:
Howard Slater: LOTTA CONTINUA – Roots Music and the Politics of Production
Also an article critiquing Muslimgauze’s politics, an archival 80s interview with John Balance of Coil, and a whole lot more – check it.
Or buy the print edition direct from the uncarved.org shop.
Datacide issue 10 is imminent, its publication to be accompanied by a Datacide event featuring… well, more of that soon.