Do we have politicians brave enough to tackle the real causes of stress in our society?

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When trying to appraise any situation the question that has always to be asked is cui bono, or who benefits? That clearly coordinated rioting is taking place in the UK obviously justifies this question being asked.

I accept that there is such a thing as coincidence in life. I also believe that when something is happening that suggests that a pattern of behaviour is being revealed then to presume that this is coincidence is mistaken. Coordination is much more likely.

That is most especially the case when we are aware that there has been massive misinformation with regard to migration published by the UK news media over many years. The Daily Mail and the Daily Express have been particularly responsible for this, although throughout the media over the last few days the widespread acceptance by employed commentators that migration is a problem and that there is, apparently, a legitimate right to complain about those who can be identified as migrants has been far too commonplace to be comfortable. That at last some of the media have a stake in the creation of the current situation appears undeniable as a result.

The Conservative Party and Reform have also heavily promoted an anti-immigrant agenda, whilst Labour has been far too weak to resist it. As a consequence, we now see them, too, supporting the idea that the free movement of people is, somehow, a threat to our freedom, and that migration must be controlled, come what may, even though the whole bedrock of the UK has been built on the basis of migration actually happening, and we once invaded and occupied other countries without ever asking permission, which it seems those in power would very much like to forget.

Who else has gained from creating stress leading to the current situation? Some social media companies would definitely appear to have done so.

What is it, therefore, that those who have promoted these ideas seek to gain by doing so? 

Firstly, I think we can safely say it is none of those things that those who are on the streets claim to be worried about. When they are denying that they are racist, those rioting about migration suggest that they are worried about pressure on wages, increased use of public resources and pressure on housing as excuses for their actions. I frankly doubt that any of those entities that I have noted above care very much about these supposed concerns of those who might claim that they are legitimately protesting. None of them seems intent on solving the problems of low pay, poor public services or housing shortages, so the possibility that they might be exploiting the issue of migration for their own goals has to considered.

Saying so, we know that the Mail, Express, Tories and Reform all share a mythology based on the idea that there was once an ideal Britain when misogyny and the Empire ruled. They use this wholly false idea as an excuse for the re-establishment of patriarchal power by a wealthy elite. I think Labour is not far from this view now, such is its dedication to the symbolism surrounding these ideas.

It does, therefore, follow that those promoting anti-immigrant sentiment are doing so to fuel their own deeply divisive political agendas. They have a very real responsibility for what is happening as a result, most especially as they are in many ways responsible for exacerbating the real inequalities in our society that feed into the tension that has led to rioting.

Then there is a second reason for what has happened, and that is a profit motive. For some in the media, whether mainstream or social, fuelling anger on migration - and so racial hatred - has been a way of promoting sales of their products. There would not have been nearly so many front covers of the Mail and Express on this issue if that was not the case. Social media has won traffic, too, as a result: that is why it is not dealing with the issue.

Third, behind all this there are the tech billionaires and others of exceptional wealth who do not believe in democracy, would rather see it gone, and who are happy that it be stressed to its limits by what is happening. Did Elon Musk really suggest civil war was likely in the UK in a disinterested way? I don't know because I cannot know his mind. But if your desire is to undermine the state and social structures as we know them, then the creation of social stress most certainly helps.

Put together, there appears to be a remarkable lack of coincidence about what is happening. All it took was a trigger - which in this case was manufactured using misinformation - and a hot few days, and the stress spilt over.

Of course, this stress might go away. A few days of rain and trouble on the streets will fade. But the tensions will not.

Companies with interests in fuelling tension that promote sales of their products; politicians who are indifferent to the needs of most people they are meant to serve and the conditions they are forced to live in; and those with wealth intent on bringing down democracy are not going away, and they all carry a big portion of the blame for what is happening, without in any way condoning the actions of those who are rioting, which are vile.

There could be change.

Papers could be charged with fuelling racist tension.

Social media could be better regulated.

The ability of those with wealth to influence politics could be constrained.

Politicians could make addressing inequality and poverty their priority.

All of those things are possible.

Then, the cause for what is happening might begin to dissipate.

But until we take seriously the fact that millions of people live lives of unacceptable poverty in the UK anger will remain, and those intent on using that anger for their own ends will continue to exist.

My concern is that all I am hearing from politicians is discussion on criminality. That is the symptom, and not the cause of what is happening. It has got to be addressed, but matters should not stop there. The real causes of what is happening - including the Islamophobia deeply embedded in UK politics, as Baroness Farsi has so often, and bravely said - have to be addressed. Until it is, we will live in a society ill at ease with itself at cost to us all.


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