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Artful self satire? I fear not

Face to face: satirist and journalist debate the state of British politics. Photograph: Suki Dhanda for the Observer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I couldn’t help but feel the Observer political columnist Andrew Rawnsley was totally arse-about-face in his line of questions and comment during this interview with TV political satirist Armando Iannucci.

I read the piece and commented on the website, as per below. What do you think?

Is Rawnsley brilliantly satirising his own work in this piece? I fear not.

What a lot of tosh, as per this…

I want to investigate whether he feels any responsibility for the fact that so many of the British do hold politics in a deep contempt, a contempt that is often richly deserved but which can also be indiscriminate, lazy and ultimately poisonous for democracy.

I want to investigate whether Mr Rawnsley feels HE has any repsonsibility for the same, he and a landslide majority (which means 3 men and a dog under UK first past the post system) of mainstream political journalists.

The deep contempt people feel for “democracy” is because anyone who thinks for a moment about our system of government knows it offers us only joke influence over the people who run our lives. If we like a satirical TV programme it’s because it reflects the true, sorry state of our political systems, local to global, far more than anything Rawnsley and friends ever produce.

Iannucci can have his OBE as a comedic act if he wants though it’s no way his funniest.

Satire is a weak weapon if you dream of radical political change, which I do, but at least you get a laugh.

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Ireland Yes, Ireland No – is that really the only option?

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1f/Irish_Fiscal_Compact_referendum_posters.jpg/225px-Irish_Fiscal_Compact_referendum_posters.jpg

(Photo by the Blue-haired lawyer)

Irish voters have a chance to vote between paying more or less for their public debt today, according to their Prime Minister Enda Kenny. Put that way, I can imagine the temptation to vote “yes”.

It’s a pretty rubbish choice.

That Irish citizens have a formal right to express their opinion on EU issues is a great thing, in theory. There’s no such option guaranteed in Britain. The reality, though, is that if Irish voters choose the option politicians don’t want, like when they rejected the Lisbon Treaty, they get asked to vote again.

Ireland’s experience is the clearest sign you could get that the EU project is a busted flush. Nice idea that different countries cooperate – awful implementation. We need root-and-branch reform of the European Union or the project’s scrapping.

I say that as a former europhile, someone who spent five years as a reporter in Brussels following the twists and turns of policy as a freelance and then with Reuters. Having now studied more about what “democracy” is meant to mean, which is government by the people or by representatives of their interests, I can’t help but conclude the EU is a democratic disaster. Our politicians do not represent our interests and we have no way to influence their day-to-day decisions. This is true at the national level and far more so in European policy.

The euro is the most pressing and obvious example of EU failure, there are plenty of others. We must understand these issues better or continue to suffer their fall out. Dismissing it all as too boring is total self-sabotage.

Chapter 2 of my book Fraudcast News tackles the issue with more specific examples. It explains how this issue has nothing to do with the “us and them” of different countries but much more the 1% and 99% of the Occupy movement, the few very rich versus the rest of us. It is one of five chapters that lay out the problems of how bad journalism supports our bogus democracies. You can download it for free or buy a paperback or eBook via the link above.

It has ideas and examples of positive solutions too, built upwards from the local level, meaning this is a work of optimism.

My advice for conflicted Irish voters today, for all my fellow EU citizens in fact, is not to despair or to get lost in anger, as understandable as that is. We need to get active. So grab a copy of the book to find how we can all start doing something about ordinary people’s chronic lack of influence over politics and finance.

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Watching documentaries in the company of strangers, then meeting them

Fish crowd for seats at a screening of "The End of the Line" - they weren't convinced (image courtesy of http://endoftheline.com/film/)

A weekend at the Bristol Radical Film Festival reminded me why it is so great to watch political documentaries with other human beings and then to chew over what you’ve just seen, outside the privacy of your own home.

Part of the reason we suffer such rubbish, wealth-biased government is because we’re too dumb to think of alternatives or how we might ever put them into practice. Regular, local film screenings and related debates, preferably for free, help plug the many holes in our knowledge. They come with the added, democratic benefit of exposing us to the wisdom and perspectives of strangers, which is always useful.

The last film I watched before leaving the festival – The End of the Line – was a case in point. It documents the pillaging of the world’s seas by industrialised fishing fleets over the last 50 years, and how we risk having no fish within a generation.

One of the film’s upsides is the news that we are, at last, establishing some scientific proof of collapsing fish stocks worldwide. Among several downsides was its failure to drill down into the specifics of who profits from all this plunder or how we might stop them or hold them to account.

As the credits rolled, I thought to myself the film was okay if a little unrealistic in its proposals. It urged people to eat sustainably sourced fish, to badger their politicians about limiting fishing quotas to what scientists recommend, and to back the creation of more marine protected areas around the world. Fine as far as they went but not very convincing. Having witnessed as a reporter how European politicians and civil servants always cave into vested fisheries interests, I know the chances of conventional political solutions to this problem are near zero.

Fifteen minutes of listening to fellow audience members made me realise I’d been far too easy on the film. Just one of the points made was how supermarkets and even McDonald’s were given such an easy ride. Each got some great publicity in the film on the back of a few vague promises to do better. One audience member had surfed the Internet during the screening to check those promises against the facts, finding how limited they were and how those made had been broken since the film’s release.

Other people criticised the film as just too limited and too complacent. It ignored the broader picture of global resource plunder driven by our obsession with economic growth and return on capital. The film’s perspective, which as many observed was very rich-world, failed to convey the relative scale of threat faced by the different parties it featured. While Europeans can switch to other protein sources, or rather the richer ones can, Senegalese fishing communities face far starker problems of just getting enough to eat. The film’s cosy recommendations were hardly going to help them out.

The debate was excellent, one of several I enjoyed after the weekend’s many films. It encouraged me to stick with the regular screenings I have been part of during the past five years in southwest France, where I usually live. Showing free films on the second Friday of every month, with shared food and discussions, opens up opportunities for all sorts of unimagined exchanges and locally organised initiatives. They help people understand the bogus accountability of our politicians and the failures of our conventional media to hold them to account.

I explain the idea in greater depth in my book Fraudcast News, which is now available in paperback, as an eBook or, if you contact me directly, a free PDF file. While documentaries such as The End of the Line at least highlight pressing eco-crises they usually fail to expose the root causes – our failed and corrupt governance systems and the dominance of money over everything.

We have to do better. That includes organising local screenings, volunteer-run film festivals and video activist trainings.

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It’s out there

After much huffing and puffing, Fraudcast News has finally made it into paperback form – what I have to confess is still my preferred reading medium.

Self publishing – whatever people might write  about the death of conventional publishing etc. etc. –  is damn hard work.

You can get a copy here.

 

 

 

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New masters of the media universe? I don’t think so.

I couldn’t help but weigh in on the Observer comments thread in response to this frothy article about the new celebrities that are our mainstream financial journalists.

These are people with enormous influence and power. Sadly, they are not helping us much in tackling the feral behaviour of unrestrained and barely regulated international financial markets and banks. They describe the surface of these complex issues but not why nothing is being done politically to change the fundamentals. Don’t be fooled by puff stories about a few bankers’ bonuses – which is deckchairs on the Titanic territory.

To be fair to the reporters highlighted in the Observer piece, it is probably impossible to do these  jobs properly while staying employed in those posts.

I know the tensions involved having been a markets reporter myself from 1997 to 2001, an experience I describe in chapter 3 of Fraudcast News. It was a key part of a reporting experience that led me to conclude that I must quit Reuters to find an alternative journalism model.

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Michael Albert on Occupy everything

This is an interview shot by friends of mine last weekend at a radical media conference in London. Michael Albert is a very thoughtful and experienced activist who is always worth listening to. If you want a response to all that political stuff that’s pissing you off right now, may I invite you to take a look.

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Rebellious Media Conference

What with the long radio silence?

Well, self-publishing isn’t as easy as I’d thought it would be, at least not as quick in any case. Having had a friend do some straight talking on my first draft, I’m trying to pull it apart and put it back together without destroying the whole. Tricky business.

In the meantime, I’m headed here this weekend, to the Rebellious Media Conference in London. I hope to catch up with some old friends working on alternative media and politics and to make a few new ones.

This is what’s written on the packet:

The gathering has three main aims:

- to showcase inspiring examples of radical media practice;
- to further develop radical critiques of the mainstream media;
- to enable activists, journalists and students to engage in training and skillsharing.

It will also provide a chance for dialogue between radical media and mainstream media; for radical media groups to come together to discuss the challenges and opportunities facing us, particularly in relation to the digital revolution. The intention is to capture as much as possible of the RMC and to make it available on the web, and for there to be ongoing projects coming out of the RMC.

My intention is to look for collaborators in a post Fraudcast News project to build a nested network of radical, or public-interest journalists. Their reports would range from local to global levels of governance, their remit being to make our politics and governance systems accountable to we the people.

Here’s hoping….

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