Reblogged from Vox Political:
It has been rumoured that V for Vendetta ‘Guy Fawkes’ masks
are to be banned from large-scale public demonstrations in the UK.
They have already been banned in Bahrain
and Saudi
Arabia.
The masks were adopted by the loosely-affiliated protesters Anonymous as a
clear indication of members’ feelings towards a Conservative/Liberal Democrat
Coalition government whose actions, they believe, have been increasingly
fascist.
These people have a point.
Has anyone read V for Vendetta lately? An early chapter,
‘Victims’, provides the historical background to the fascist Britain of
the story – and provides very disturbing parallels with the current government
and its policies.
In the story, there is a recession and a nuclear war. Fortunately, in real
life we have managed to avoid the war (so far) but the recession of 2007 onwards
has caused severe hardship for many, with average wages cut by nine per cent (in
real terms) due to government policies.
In the story, the line “Everybody was waiting for the government to do
something” is notable. Isn’t that just about as British as you can get? As
a nation, we seem unwilling to take the initiative; we just wait for someone
else to do something. We queue up. And then we complain when we don’t find
exactly what we wanted at the end of the queue. But then it’s too
late.
Does the government “do something”? Well, no – not in the story, because
there isn’t any government worth mentioning at this point. But then… “It was
all the fascist groups. The right-wingers. They’d all got together with some of
the big corporations…”
Here’s another parallel. How many corporations are enjoying the fruits of the
Conservative-led (right-wing) government’s privatisation drive?
Look at my IDS (I
Believe) video on YouTube - which features only a tiny minority of those
firms.
The NHS carve-up signified huge opportunities for firms like Circle Health
and Virgin, and Bain Capital (who bought our blood plasma supplies). Care UK,
the firm that famously sponsored Andrew Lansley while he was working on the
regressive changes to the health service that eventually became the Health and
Social Care Act 2012, no doubt also has fingers in the pie.
The Treasury is receiving help – if you can call it that – from the ‘big
four’ accountancy firms – PricewaterhouseCoopers, Deloitte, Ernst & Young
and KPMG. They have written the law on tax avoidance. By no coincidence at all,
these are the firms that run the major tax avoidance schemes that have been
taken up by businesses and rich individuals who are resident in the UK. For more
information on the government’s attitude to taxing the rich, see
Michael Meacher’s recent blog entry.
The Department for Work and Pensions has employed many private firms; this is
the reason that department is haemorrhaging money. There are the work programme
provider firms who, as has been revealed in previous blog entries, provide
absolutely no useful training and are less likely to find anyone a job than if
they carried on by themselves; there are the IT firms currently working on
Universal Credit, about which Secretary of State Iain Duncan Smith lied to
Parliament when he said he was having to write off £34 million of expenditure –
the true figure was later revealed to be closer to £161 million, almost five
times as much; there are Atos and Capita, and probably other firms that have
been hired to carry out so-called ‘work capability assessments’ of people
claiming sickness, incapacity and disability benefits, according to a plan that
intentionally ignores factual medical evidence and places emphasis on a bogus,
tick-box test designed to find ways to cut off their support; and there is Unum
Insurance, the criminal American corporation that designed that test, in order
to push British workers into buying its bogus insurance policies that work on
exactly the same principle – this is theft on a grand scale.
So we have a government in cahoots with big business, and treating the
citizens – the voters – like cattle. We’ll see more of this as we go
on.
“Then they started taking people away… All the black people and the
Pakistanis…” All right, these social groups have not been, specifically,
targeted (yet) – but we have seen evidence that our government would like to do
so. Remember those advertising vans the Home Office funded, that drove around
London with a message that we were told was for illegal immgrants: “Go
home”?
“That is a term long-associated with knuckle-dragging racists,” said Owen
Jones on the BBC’s Any Questions.
“We’re seeing spot-checks and racial profiling of people at tube stations. We
have a woman on the news… she was born in Britain; she was told she was stopped
because she ‘didn’t sound British’. And we have the official Home Office
[Twitter] account being used to send gleeful tweets which show people being
thrown into vans with a hashtag, ‘#immigrationoffenders’.
“Is this the sort of country you want to live in, where the Conservatives use
taxpayers’ money to inflame people’s fears and prejudices in order to win
political advantage? Because I don’t think most people do want that to
happen.”
This blog’s
article on the subject added that not only this, but other governments (like
that in Greece) had created an opportunity to start rounding up anybody deemed
“undesirable” by the state. “Greece is already rounding up people of unorthodox
sexuality, drug addicts, prostitutes, immigrants and the poor and transferring
them to internment and labour camps,” it stated.
Note also the government’s response to criticism from UN special rapporteur
on adequate housing Raquel Rolnik. Grant Shapps and Iain Duncan Smith and their
little friends tried to say that she had not done her job properly but, when
this was exposed as a lie, they reverted to type and attacked her for her racial
origin, national background, and beliefs – political and personal. You
can read the lot in this despicable Daily Mail smear piece.
Back to V for Vendetta, where the narrative continues: “White
people too. All the radicals and the men who, you know, liked other men. The
homosexuals. I don’t know what they did with them all.” Well, we know what
Greece is doing with them all, and in the story, such people also ended up in
internment and labour camps. We’ll come back to that.
“They made me go and work in a factory with a lot of other kids. We were
putting matches into boxes. I lived in a hostel. It was cold and dirty…”
Last month this blog commented on government plans for ‘residential
Workfare for the disabled’, rounding up people with disabilities and putting
them into modern-day workhouses where someone else would profit from their work
while they receive benefits alone – and where the potential for abuse was huge.
If that happens, how long will it be before every other jobseeker ends up in a
similar institution?
A while ago, a friend in the cafe I visit said that a Tory government will
always see every class of people other than its own as “livestock”. That’s the
word he used – “livestock”. From the above, with descriptions
of people being treated like cattle, or being herded into the workhouse for
someone else to profit from their work, it seems he has a very strong case.
So let’s go back to these internment and labour camps – in V for
Vendetta they’re called “resettlement” camps. A later chapter – The
Vortex – reveals that inmates at such camps are subjected to unethical
medical experimentation. The doctor carrying out the trials notes in her diary
that the camp commandant “promised to show me my research
stock… they’re a poor bunch.”
Her research stock are human beings who have been subjected to conditions
similar to those of the Nazi concentration camps. Notice the language – this
doctor considers the other human beings taking part to be her property. And they
are “research stock” – in other words, she does not see them as other
human beings but as livestock – exactly as the friend in the cafe stated.
And jobseekers in today’s UK are being coerced into experimental drug trials,
disguised as job opportunities, according
to the latest reports.
V for Vendetta‘s tagline – the blurb that set the scene – was:
“Fascist Britain, 1997″. It seems the only part that its author, Alan
Moore, actually got wrong was the date.