Big Brother isn’t watching you

August 11th, 2011

I no longer live in London. I’ve been transplanted to Los Angeles by a combination of love and money; such good fortune and opportunity, in both cases, you might think disqualify me from commenting on matters in my homeland. Even the results of Britain’s Got Ice-Factor may lay prettily glistening beyond my remit now that I am self banished.

To be honest when I lived in England I didn’t really care too much for the fabricated theatrics of reality TV. Except when I worked for Big Brother, then it was my job to slosh about in the amplified trivia of the housemates/inmates. Sometimes it was actually quite bloody interesting. Particularly the year that “Nadia” won. She was the Portuguese transsexual. Remember? No? Well, that’s the nature of the medium; as it whizzes past the eyes it seems very relevant but the malady of reality TV stars is that their shelf life, expires, like dog years, by the power of seven. To me it seems like Nadia’s triumph took place during the Silver Jubilee, we had a street party.

Early in that series there was an incident of excitement and high tension. The testosteronal, alpha figures of the house – a Scot called Jason and a Londoner called Victor incited by the teasing conditions and a camp lad called Marcus (wow, it’s all coming back) kicked off in the house, smashed some crockery and a few doors. Police were called, tapes were edited and the carnival rolled on. When I was warned to be discrete on-air about the extent of the violence I quoted a British WW1 general who reflecting on the inability of his returning troops to adapt to civilian life said “You cannot rouse the animal in man then expect it to be put aside at a moments notice.”
“Yeah, that’s exactly the kind of thing we want you to say the opposite of” said the channel’s representative.

This week’s riots are sad and frightening and if I have by virtue of my temporary displacement forgone the right to speak about the behaviour of my countrymen then this is gonna be irksome, I mean even David Cameron came back from his holiday. Eventually. The Tuscan truffles lost their succulence when the breaking glass became too loud to ignore. Then dopey ol’ Boris came cycling back into the London clutter with his spun gold hair and his spun shit logic as it became apparent that the holiday was over.

In fact it isn’t my absence from the territory of London that bothers me it’s my absence from the economic class that are being affected that itches in my gut because as I looked at the online incident maps the boroughs that were suffering all, for me, had some resonance. I’ve lived in Dalston, Hackney, Elephant, Camden and Bethnal Green. I grew up round Dagenham and Romford and whilst I could never claim to be from the demographic most obviously affected I feel guilty that I’m not there now.

I feel proud to be English, proud to be a Londoner (alright an Essex boy) never more so than since being in exile and I naturally began to wonder what would make young people destroy their communities.

I have spoken to mates in London and Manchester and they sound genuinely frightened and hopeless and the details of their stories place this outbreak beyond the realms of any political idealism or rationalisation. But I can’t, from my ivory tower in the Hollywood Hills, compete with the understandable yet futile rhetoric, describing the rioters as mindless. Nor do I want to dwell on the sadness of our beautiful cities being tarnished and people’s shops and livelihoods, sometimes generations old, being immolated. The tragic and inevitable deaths ought be left for eulogies and grieving. Tariq Jahal has spoken so eloquently from his position of painful proximity, with such compassion that nearly all else is redundant.

The only question I can legitimately ask is; why is this happening? Mark Duggan’s death has been badly handled but no one is contesting that is a reason for these conflagrations beyond the initial flash of activity in Tottenham. I’ve heard Theresa May and the Old Etonians whose hols have been curtailed (many would say they’re the real victims) saying the behaviour is “unjustifiable” and “unacceptable”. Wow! Thanks guys! What a wonderful use of the planet’s fast depleting oxygen resources, now that’s been dealt with can we move onto more taxing matters like whether or not Jack The Ripper was a ladies man? And what the hell do bears get up to in those woods?

However “unacceptable” and “unjustifiable” it might be, it has happened so we better accept it and whilst we can’t justify it we should kick around a few neurons and work out why so many people feel utterly disconnected from the cities they live in.

Unless on the news tomorrow it’s revealed that there’s been a freaky “criminal creating” chemical leak in London AND Manchester AND Liverpool AND Birmingham that’s causing young people to spontaneously and simultaneously violate their environments – in which case we can park the ol’ brainboxes, stop worrying and get on with the football season, but, if as I suspect, there hasn’t, we have, as Human Beings, got a few things to consider together.

I should here admit that I have been arrested for criminal damage for my part in anti capitalist protest earlier in this decade. I often attended protests and then, in my early twenties, and on drugs, I enjoyed it when the protests lost direction and became chaotic, hostile even. I was intrigued by the anarchist “Black-Block”, hooded and masked, as in retrospect, was their agenda but was more viscerally affected by the football “casuals” who’d turn up because the veneer of the protest’s idealistic objective gave them the perfect opportunity to wreck stuff and have a row with the Old Bill.
Big Brother isn’t watching you

That was never my cup of tea though. For one thing policeman are generally pretty good fighters and secondly it registered that the accent they shouted at me with was closer to my own than that of some of those singing about the red flag making the wall of plastic shields between us seem thinner.

I found those protests exciting, yes because I was young and a bit of a twerp but also, I suppose, because there was a void in me. A lack of direction, a sense that I was not invested in the dominant culture, that Government existed not to look after the interests of the people it was elected to represent but the big businesses that they were in bed with.

I felt that, and I had a Mum that loved me, a Dad that told me that nothing was beyond my reach, an education, a grant from Essex council (to train as an actor of all things!!!) AND several charities that gave me money for maintenance. I shudder to think how disenfranchised I would have felt if I had been deprived of that long list of privileges.

That state of deprivation though, is of course, the condition that many of those rioting endure as their unbending reality. No education, a weakened family unit, no money and no way of getting any. JD Sports is probably easier to desecrate if you can’t afford what’s in there and the few poorly paid jobs there are taken. Amidst the bleakness of this social landscape, squinting all the while in the glare of a culture that radiates ultra-violet consumerism and infra-red celebrity. That daily, hourly, incessantly enforces the egregious, deceitful message that you are what you wear, what you drive, what you watch and what you watch it on, in livid, neon pixels. The only light in their lives comes from these luminous corporate messages. No wonder they have their fucking hoods up.

I remember David Cameron saying “hug a hoodie” but I haven’t seen him doing it, why would he? Hoodies don’t vote, they’ve realised it’s pointless, that whoever gets elected will just be a different shade of the “we don’t give a toss about you party.”

Politicians don’t represent the interests of people that don’t vote. They barely care about the people who do vote. They look after the corporations who get them elected. Cameron only spoke out against News International when it became evident to us, US, the people, not to him, (like Rose West, “He must’ve known”) that the Newspapers Murdoch controlled were happy to desecrate the dead in the pursuit of another exploitative, distracting story.

Why am I surprised that these young people behave destructively, “mindlessly”, motivated only by self-interest? How should we describe the actions of the city bankers that brought our economy to it’s knees in 2010? Altruistic? mindful? Kind? But then again, they do wear suits, so they deserve to be bailed out, perhaps that’s why not one of them has been imprisoned. And they got away with a lot more than a few fucking pairs of trainers.

These young people have no sense of community because they haven’t been given one. They have no stake in society because Cameron’s mentor Margaret Thatcher told us there’s no such thing.

If we don’t want our young people to tear apart our communities then don’t let people in power tear apart the values that hold our communities together.

As you have by now surely noticed, I don’t know enough about politics to ponder a solution and my hands are sticky with blood money from representing corporate interests through film, television and commercials, venerating, through my endorsements and celebrity, products and a lifestyle that contributes to the alienation of an increasingly dissatisfied underclass. But I know, as we all intuitively know that the solution is all around us and it isn’t political, it is spiritual. Gandhi said “Be the change you want to see in the world.”

In this simple sentiment we can find hope, as we can in the efforts of those cleaning up the debris and ash in bonhomous, broom-wielding posse’s. If we want to live in a society where people feel included, we must include them, where they feel represented, we must represent them and where they feel love and compassion for their communities then we, the members of that community, must find love and compassion for them.

As we sweep away the mistakes made in the selfish, nocturnal darkness we must ensure that amidst the broken glass and sadness we don’t sweep away the youth lost amongst the shards in the shadows cast by the new dawn.

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790 Responses to “Big Brother isn’t watching you”

  1. Jen says:

    I (respectfully) disagree… What has been happening in the UK is terrible and scary and I am sick of people making excuses for these poor deprived children who have no prospects and as a result HAVE to riot, kill people and ruin the businesses and livelihoods of hard working individuals.
    I dont care where you come from, how poor your town or family is at the end of the day we live in a country where every child is entitled to a free education until the age of 18. Every child born into wealth or a council estate has every opportunity to better themselves. The problem is that these kids don’t think they should have to and instead feel that this country owes them something and they’re content with living off hand outs that they’ve neither earnt nor deserve. Yeah – jobs are scarce but there is still work out there, failing that stay in school, go to college… But this isn’t happening.
    With perhaps the exception of the first riot in tottenham there has been no cause or reason for the obscene violence and downright terrifying actions we have witnessed this last week. These kids aren’t setting fire to someone’s livelihood because they feel hard done by they are doing it because they think it’s fun. They’ve never had to work for anything and as a result they have no concept or respect for things people have worked hard for.
    Am I some right wing middle/upper class toff who’s never worked a day in their life? No, I’m a 24 year old, working class female who was raised in a single parent household in a poor area of south west London. No one has ever helped me, I’ve never signed on or claimed a single benefit. Instead I have worked every day since I was 16, stayed in school till 18, entered a career and am now paying my own way through a full time university education whilst working a 40 hour week. Is life hard? Sure. But only I have the power to make it easier and I dont expect anyone to help me out. I want my life to be better so I’m doing what I can to make it better – I’m not kicking in shop windows and starting fires because Cameron doesn’t care about me and my future. I suggest these rioters do the same.

  2. bLoEsWuInS @ thetastelevel says:

    Think my post slightly tops this

    http://www.thetastelevel.com/2011/08/day-in-life-of-looter.html

  3. Charlotte Jacobs says:

    I don’t believe that you yourself should disregard your opinion because you no longer live in the UK. Having read your books I know that you have had your fair share of hardship, however you also had determination to become what you wanted to be and attain what you wanted in life. Nobody is perfect, that is the obvious however without supplying a pity story of my own, anyone can easily pity themselves enough to blame everyone else and destroy other people’s livelihood through jealousy. But honestly? After wading through hardship two kinds of people emerge in my opinion, those like yourself who, though not in the most perfect way, will continue to try and work hard for what they deserve rather then claim to have the “right” to everything without working. I believe you’re right that the solution is spiritual, but it requires people who, though they may feel bitter and frustrated, also have strength and determination left in themselves to seek faith in themselves. My simple argument is that after watching my hometown torn apart and sitting inside fearing for my home and young family’s safety I believe it is the worst of humanity that would kill and terrorise others for their own self pity, because there are those who suffer the same difficulties and still manage to live peacefully with their world. Thank you for writing about the riots and for writing honesty rather then sympathetic sweeping artificial comments as others in your position would.

  4. sarah kennedy says:

    Russell wonderfully written as always.

    However although I do agree with you on a fair few points here, mostly on the whole News International front I do have to disagree on the motives of the rioters. Especially now some of them have turned out to be recent graduates, a millionaires daughter, people with jobs etc. It really was a load of young people ganging together being opportunistic and out to kick the shit out of stuff and get as much stuff as possible. Basically they were bored.

    I said to my mum that I could completely see my brother being there if it was a few years ago, he went a bit mental in his teenage years, stealing and vandalising for absolutely NO reason – other than the fact it was fun and made him look cool to his friends. That is why this has happened not because they are disenfranchised.

    Love Sarah xxx

  5. andrea says:

    i, for one, think you are a smart and eloquent brit…no matter what the plonkers say.

    you’ve hit the nail right on the head when you stated that “These young people have no sense of community because they haven’t been given one.”

    absoBLOODYlutely. when a generation has no hope, no options, no future, no NOTHING except a needles chance of luck or divine intervention by simon cowell? what is a lad to do?

    hate. depression. violence. despair…

    without direction or a glimmer of positivity at some point in their upcoming lives, how can one expect our younger generation to care…

    the whole situation is sad. as an essex girl who emigrated from england at a young age, i am glad for the opportunities in my new country that i may not have had if my family had stayed.

    well, except perhaps that my dream of marrying prince william might have stood a better chance. also, a missed opportunity to have my face on a china plate. awesome.

    *sigh*

  6. Rob says:

    What you have said will be true for some but for others I gree with what danny baker said @prodnose To Darcus Howe & the rest in the wise apologist racket. Has it ever occurred to you that some people are just a bit thick? #Iblamesocietyguv

  7. Shirley says:

    I love your work and I love your intelligent writing but this time I am sorry I feel you are making excuses for this breed of low lifes. There is no excuse for their behaviour.

  8. Thiefree says:

    Eloquent and persuasive as ever, and I’m inclined to agree.

    There’s something about the #riotwombles, however much or little cleaning they actually did, that cheers my heart. They’re the silver lining in all this. They’re proof that people still care, still want to help their cities.

    Showing up with a broom and a sense of optimism is worth so much more than any amount of rambling about the Big Society. Cameron’s speech, predictably condemning and threatening and offering nothing of insight or value, was an utter waste of time.

    Sorry, this comment has been incohesive and unstructured.

  9. Anger C & Insanesworth says:

    We did a blog in the form of rap. Listen to this…

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AI28k_hpdag

  10. andrea says:

    probably i should also say that no matter how pissed off i was at ‘big brother’ i would still never hurt other people. so, no, there isn’t a JUSTIFIABLE reason for this eruption of violence. but one can certainly see an EXPLAINABLE reason.

    and now i’m off to find a furry wall. you should all do the same…it will make you feel better.

    you’re welcome.

  11. Mrs Mill says:

    Thank you Russell, a pleasure to read.
    As a child of the riots of the 80s its quite amazing to experience this as a nation 30 years on.
    We are all neuron bashing trying desperately to find a vision, a solution to whats been called a lost generation. Each life has such value, how to we transform our society?
    Hopefully this nation are ready to take responsibility. My fear is big business & authorities will build tougher walls.

  12. James says:

    This blog post would make sense if something other then greed and entitlement motivated the rioters.

    These people weren’t fighting the governement when they burned down small businesses and cost others their jobs. They wanted to “fuck shit up” regardless of the consequence because they wanted attention.

    To claim they did this in order to figh their placement in life is a blatent insult to those of England who fight their battles without violence

  13. sidney says:

    outstanding blog russ.

  14. Kieranosulman says:

    “If we don’t want our young people to tear apart our communities then don’t let people in power tear apart the values that hold our communities together.” Really resonates for Ireland too. Failed by all in authority.

  15. Amanda Treichler says:

    I am so moved by blog. Your thoughts are pure and your heart is there. Thank you for speaking up and giving a voice to those youths who are being dismissed as nothing more than senseless thugs. There is a reason for this behavior and the goverment needs to step up and take responsibility for their part in creating such chaos. You have a beautiful mind.

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