Rambling and off on tangents, but reports remarks that have spurred
controversy.


http://www.independent.co.uk/story.jsp?story=366725

I took my son to see Michael Moore live at the Roundhouse, in north London,
before Christmas. The US radical and author of the best-selling book Stupid
White Men was (mostly) clever, funny, angry, sharp, iconoclastic and
sceptical about the lies and humbug processed by the US government and big
business. Sure there were some flunked bits - you expect that, the troughs
are part of the adventure, an evening with a well-worn rebel.

What we did not expect was to feel so enraged at one point that we almost
walked out. It was when Moore went into a rant about how the passengers on
the planes on 11 September were scaredy-cats because they were mostly white.
If the passengers had included black men, he claimed, those killers, with
their puny bodies and unimpressive small knives, would have been crushed by
the dudes, who as we all know take no disrespect from anybody. God save us
from such stupid white men, especially now, when in the US and the UK, black
people's lives are being ripped to shreds by drugs, lawlessness, fear and
frightful violence plus the endless circle of racism, exclusion and
incarceration. This is not awesome, Mr Moore; it is a calamity, for
descendants of slaves unimaginably more so.

Remember this as we mourn the murders of two young Caribbean women, victims,
it is believed, of tough black men who control some streets of Birmingham
and London and Manchester and who kill because they feel like it and they
can. "Young, Gifted and Dead," Metropolitan Police anti-gun crime posters in
2001. They showed real pictures of young men in pools of blood. Nobody took
any notice.

The maiming and killing goes on and on. Blood is freely spilled in clubs,
schools, streets, shops, the privacy of a balcony and a small garden.
Orchestrated feuds between gangs became more thrilling as guns took over
from knives and knuckles. Michael Cabey was shot as he sat on a wall; Wayne
Henry and Corey White were felled as they sat in their BMW; Godfrey Scott
was shot in the neck and his flatmate Ray Samuels was found skinned and his
tongue sliced off; the brother of the soul singer Mica Paris was shot dead
in Croydon. In parts of London,14-year-old boys carry weapons and show them
off. A black youth worker too frightened to be named tells me: "These kids
are vicious. They think bullying and beating each other up is what sissies
do. They talk about killing. They are kings when they kill. One even brought
me a cat he had shot to show the others they are in command. They love it
that everyone is afraid of them, even their own parents."

What lovely names they had, Latisha Shakespear (17) and Charlene Ellis (18),
blasted away as 30 bullets were fired early on New Year's Day as they
stepped out from the stuffiness of a party to get some fresh air. A picture
of them taken just before the party shows them in hats and identical fluffy
white jackets. A former black gang member - Scorcher, if you please - says
he is sure that these victims weren't "gangsta bitches but that they were
well connected and there will be reprisals for this". How reassuring on both
counts. So it is OK to waste "gangsta bitches" and those who may be members
of the gang who did this?

There is something distasteful, obscene even in the coverage that has
followed the killings. Male journalists in mainstream papers, like Moore
above, write over-excitedly about the guns, giving us pictures and prices,
plus interviews with cool gang members, carrying on as if this is some
Tarantino movie that has hit town. Meanwhile, decent black men and women in
particular - mothers, sisters, lovers and daughters - weep and grieve as
black-on-black killings rise in our inner cities, just as they have in the
US.

Yes, we have massively more guns and armed crime in our society, and all
races are involved. But British Caribbeans are disproportionately affected
by the problem, and their numbers are small - only about 550,000. Their
lives are vulnerable, for a whole raft of reasons.

Blunkett and Blair are, at last, turning their attention to this problem,
too long ignored or hidden by white and black leaders. A summit is to be
called in Birmingham, and there is to be a change in the law to introduce a
minimum five-year sentence for anyone found with a firearm. Who would have
thought that the fiery Diane Abbott, lifelong fighter of racism, would today
be calling for this tougher legislation? But then she is a black woman and
MP for Hackney, where she has watched the horror of spiralling
black-on-black violence.

But the law alone cannot do the job. I think Abbott should head a task force
to challenge the culture of confrontation, ignorance, violence, drugs,
sexism and heartlessness that has corrupted young black males with their
false emblems of pride and extracted respect. She is trusted more than many
of the black middle-class suits who will be called upon to take charge of
any initiatives.

We need the Government to nail the producers of vicious filth. Violent songs
and videos sustain these men in their life choices. They feel good that they
are lauded as desensitised robo-killers. And please, I simply don't accept
all that liberal wash about the neutrality of art, popular culture,
television and music. In December, a pitiless black gang of young men were
convicted for violent car jackings. They had modelled themselves on old
American gangsters, even dressing like them. The hardest gangs love So Solid
Crew and the duo Oxide and Neutrino, who, of course, deny they have any real
influence with such songs as "Bound for D Reload (A&E)". Neutrino has
himself been shot outside a club, and three members of So Solid have been
charged with carrying loaded guns. It is scandalous that the music industry
and others walk away without any conscience about the harm they do or the
good they could do.

Many other interconnected issues need to be examined. Afro-Caribbean men are
over-represented in the mental health services, according to a new report by
the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health. There is a crisis here, and the
treatment offered is inferior to that received by white patients. School
exclusions and behavioural problems, too, need to be part of the analyses.
Policing has gone through dramatic changes since the Lawrence report
(although too many racist officers remain in place) but what can be done
about the refrain that there is no trust between the police and black and
Asian people? Home Office research (Paper 129, 2000) shows that now there is
support for stop-and-search among all ethnic groups, as long as the police
treat suspects fairly, with dignity and without racism. There will be more
black men stopped in some areas where gun crime is high. To decry this as
evidence only of prejudice is now unacceptable.

There is another name I would suggest to Blunkett for his summit - Jock
Young, the criminologist whose book The Exclusive Society is the most
compelling and convincing analysis I have seen on some of what we are
witnessing. He can see the connections between Thatcherism, racism and the
self-perpetuating cycles in which images and expectations of young black men
have been ingested by some of them and activated to become our worst
collective nightmares.

While nice liberals and career anti-racists luxuriate in denial, a community
implodes.



xponent
Say What? Maru
rob
________________________________
You are a fluke of the universe.
You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not,
the universe is laughing behind your back.


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