Why the British said no to Europe
By John Pilger
The majority vote by Britons to leave the European Union was
an act of raw democracy. Millions of ordinary people refused to be bullied,
intimidated and dismissed with open contempt by their presumed betters in the
major parties, the leaders of the business and banking oligarchy and the media.
This was, in great part, a vote by those angered and
demoralised by the sheer arrogance of the apologists for the "remain"
campaign and the dismemberment of a socially just civil life in Britain. The
last bastion of the historic reforms of 1945, the National Health Service, has
been so subverted by Tory and Labour-supported privateers it is fighting for
its life.
A forewarning came when the Treasurer, George Osborne, the
embodiment of both Britain's ancient regime and the banking mafia in Europe,
threatened to cut £30 billion from public services if people voted the wrong
way; it was blackmail on a shocking scale.
Immigration was exploited in the campaign with consummate
cynicism, not only by populist politicians from the lunar right, but by Labour
politicians drawing on their own venerable tradition of promoting and nurturing
racism, a symptom of corruption not at the bottom but at the top. The reason
millions of refugees have fled the Middle East - irst Iraq, now Syria - are the
invasions and imperial mayhem of Britain, the United States, France, the
European Union and Nato. Before that, there was the wilful destruction of
Yugoslavia. Before that, there was the theft of Palestine and the imposition of
Israel.
The pith helmets may have long gone, but the blood has never
dried. A nineteenth century contempt for countries and peoples, depending on
their degree of colonial usefulness, remains a centrepiece of modern "globalisation",
with its perverse socialism for the rich and capitalism for the poor: its
freedom for capital and denial of freedom to labour; its perfidious politicians
and politicised civil servants.
All this has now come home to Europe, enriching the likes of
Tony Blair and impoverishing and disempowering millions. On 23 June, the
British said no more.
The most effective propagandists of the "European
ideal" have not been the far right, but an insufferably patrician class
for whom metropolitan London is the United Kingdom. Its leading members see
themselves as liberal, enlightened, cultivated tribunes of the 21st century
zeitgeist, even "cool". What they really are is a bourgeoisie with
insatiable consumerist tastes and ancient instincts of their own superiority.
In their house paper, the Guardian, they have gloated, day after day, at those
who would even consider the EU profoundly undemocratic, a source of social
injustice and a virulent extremism known as "neoliberalism".
The aim of this extremism is to install a permanent,
capitalist theocracy that ensures a two-thirds society, with the majority
divided and indebted, managed by a corporate class, and a permanent working
poor. In Britain today, 63 per cent of poor children grow up in families where
one member is working. For them, the trap has closed. More than 600,000
residents of Britain's second city, Greater Manchester, are, reports a study,
"experiencing the effects of extreme poverty" and 1.6 million are
slipping into penury.
Little of this social catastrophe is acknowledged in the
bourgeois controlled media, notably the Oxbridge dominated BBC. During the
referendum campaign, almost no insightful analysis was allowed to intrude upon
the clichéd hysteria about "leaving Europe", as if Britain was about
to be towed in hostile currents somewhere north of Iceland.
On the morning after the vote, a BBC radio reporter welcomed
politicians to his studio as old chums. "Well," he said to
"Lord" Peter Mandelson, the disgraced architect of Blairism,
"why do these people want it so badly?" The "these people"
are the majority of Britons.
The wealthy war criminal Tony Blair remains a hero of the
Mandelson "European" class, though few will say so these days. The
Guardian once described Blair as "mystical" and has been true to his
"project" of rapacious war.
The day after the vote, the columnist Martin Kettle offered a Brechtian
solution to the misuse of democracy by the masses. "Now surely we can
agree referendums are bad for Britain", said the headline over his
full-page piece. The "we" was unexplained but understood - just as
"these people" is understood. "The referendum has conferred less
legitimacy on politics, not more," wrote Kettle. " ... the verdict on
referendums should be a ruthless one. Never again."
The kind of ruthlessness Kettle longs for is found in
Greece, a country now airbrushed. There, they had a referendum and the result
was ignored. Like the Labour Party in
Britain, the leaders of the Syriza government in Athens are the products of an
affluent, highly privileged, educated middle class, groomed in the fakery and
political treachery of post-modernism. The Greek people courageously used the
referendum to demand their government sought "better terms" with a
venal status quo in Brussels that was crushing the life out of their country.
They were betrayed, as the British would have been betrayed.
On Friday, the Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, was asked
by the BBC if he would pay tribute to the departed Cameron, his comrade in the
"remain" campaign. Corbyn fulsomely praised Cameron's
"dignity" and noted his backing for gay marriage and his apology to
the Irish families of the dead of Bloody Sunday. He said nothing about
Cameron's divisiveness, his brutal austerity policies, his lies about "protecting"
the Health Service. Neither did he remind people of the war mongering of the
Cameron government: the dispatch of British special forces to Libya and British
bomb aimers to Saudi Arabia and, above all, the beckoning of world war three.
In the week of the referendum vote, no British politician
and, to my knowledge, no journalist referred to Vladimir Putin's speech in St.
Petersburg commemorating the seventy-fifth anniversary of Nazi Germany's
invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June, 1941. The Soviet victory - at a cost
of 27 million Soviet lives and the majority of all German forces - won the
Second World War.
Putin likened the current frenzied build up of Nato troops
and war material on Russia's western borders to the Third Reich's Operation
Barbarossa. Nato's exercises in Poland were the biggest since the Nazi
invasion; Operation Anaconda had simulated an attack on Russia, presumably with
nuclear weapons. On the eve of the referendum, the quisling secretary-general
of Nato, Jens Stoltenberg, warned Britons they would be endangering "peace
and security" if they voted to leave the EU. The millions who ignored him
and Cameron, Osborne, Corbyn, Obama and the man who runs the Bank of England
may, just may, have struck a blow for real peace and democracy in Europe.
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