Comment of the Day

One of the reasons the Guardian/Observer online combo is so useful, is that although they’re no longer the crusading radical papers of yore in them we have all the alleged progressives in one place, handy for slinging their ridiculous words back at them.

There’s the Blair apologists like Hutton and Toynbee, the pompous and self-important, like Cohen and Rawnsley, all in one convenient, nausea-inducing package, plus Comment is Free. It has a relatively open comment system, though there have been charges of poilitical moderation made by disgruntled commenters. Despite this admirable openness the papers do have their sacred cows; for instance I see there’s no commenting on Christina Odone.’s religio-elitist twittering. She’s apparerntly sacrosanct, being very well connected in political Catholic circles. It’s like wingnut welfare, only Blairite. (I digress, but there’s always time to poke fun at Our Lady of the Cocktail Parties.)

Anyway, Comment is Free’s comment sections are a boon to Comment of the Day, so cheers for that at least, Guardian/Observer. Oh and the ‘Apprentice’ liveblogging too. That was fun.

Today’s COTD summed up the current state of political affairs so cogently I had to feature it. I also value anything that saves me the trouble of writing – I can never say exactly what I mean and I’m lazy too, so if someone has saved me the trouble, yay go for it.

Falseflagmedia

June 10, 2007 8:17 AM

As cynics might see it, the whole concept of representative democracy is now dead.

By such criticism, It has been subsumed within an economic system of global corporate capitalism, where corporate lobbying, cash for questions, knighthoods for loans and the like have, arguably, turned it into a system of ‘misrepresentative’ democracy.

Politics, acorcordingly, continues to have a national constituency, and must be legitimised by reference to the ‘national interest’, but the corporate forces at work that control the economy are transnational and have no democratic mandate or control.

The alleged potential implications are perhaps legion:

The current political system, of what might be called ‘corporate feudalism’, operates to facilitate access and entry by sympathetic politicans and journalists to the controlling corporate elite, and to deflect attention from the real state of affairs. Politics can become visible crisis micro-(mis)management, whilst structural problems continue unabated.

The gap between spin and substance thus diverges ever more greatly, and people begin to discount official sources of information as propoganda.

Governments must stake a claim to the ‘national interest’ but, arguably, are increasingly driven in private by transnational interests (e.g. oil in Iraq, deindustrialisation, ceding of powers to supranational bodies, increased unregulated immigration, etc;).

By such a view, Governments become part of the ‘self-cannabilising’ state. As they sell off and outsource their own activities to their corporate lobbyists, they have fewer control levers on the economy. Having divested themselves of such tools of intervention, through privatisation, deregulation, central bank independence, etc;, economic management becomes far more difficult. The economy becomes far more volatile because there are far more economic aims to achieve than economic policies to achieve them with (an infraction of Tinbergen’s rule). As long as the global economy is in its growth state, this is sustainable for short-term consumption needs, but in the longer term, problems such as deindustrialisation, the structural balance of payments deficit, the falling savings ratio and the degradation of social capital all eat into the structure and balance of the economy.

By such a view, our system of misrepresentative democracy, as it were, nominally and necessarily excludes any meaningful input on democratic accountability within the workplace. People feel a contradictory conciousness, empowered as consumers or ‘homeowners’ but enslaved as workers in order to be ‘competitive’ under ‘globalisation'(the deindustrialisation of the US and Western Europe).

The cult of personality, arguably, is used as a means of creating the illusion of change in politics. The shift towards the notion of presidential leadership, at the expense of a more cabinet based collegiate approach, is another feature. The creation of ranks of internal spin doctors and advisors is a product of ‘corporate cannibalisation’, where lobbying is internalised within the state itself.

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Gone Fishin’

It’s a bank holiday here too as well as in the US and UK and we’re taking the day to look at kitchens. I’m already girding my loins to resist the blandishments of salespeople, because that’s all we’re doing, looking. A new kitchen is not a decision to be taken lightly, unless you’re richer than anyone needs to be and are able to just throw money at it.

So no posting today other than this: if you want some interesting stuff to look at, go have a look at my delicious bookmarks. Alternatively you may wish to avail yourself of our fine blogroll, every one a gem, or even better there’s a Young Ones YouTubeFest over at Martin’s place.

For me this sort of thing is a major physical expedition and it’ll take me a week or so to get over it; although I’m one of those weirdos who actually enjoys geeking about drawer inserts and dishwasher energy consumption and the superiority of Corian to plain laminate I do need to go and psych myself up for the coming exertion.

Enjoy your day off, whatever the weather, glorious or traditionally vile.

Comments Policy

Apologies to anyone whose comment didn’t immediately appear last night, this is a function of the time difference between the US and EU – I post while you’re snoring, you comment while I sleep :)

Only the first comment is moderated to make sure you’re not a comment spammer, after that, wheee, it’s a free for all, within the limits set, ie that you’re not a] a spammer, b] a troll, c] deliberately offensive to other commenters.

Our blog. our discretion, but e like to think we’re pretty cool about it all.

Off You Twitter, Twitter

My brief experiment with Twitter (the latest craze according to Lifehack, so it must be true) is over: I didn’t feel it added anything whatsoever to the blog. Half the time it was down for maintenance or upgrading and all it did anyway was remind me how dull I am. I was almost tempted to invent stuff just to jazz it up a liitle, but the character number limitation didn’t give much scope. No, be honest, that’s not quite true – I just really couldn’t be arsed. Or maybe it was actually because no-one ever looked at it and I had no friends and it made me feel horribly inadequate? Yup that’s probably it. But whatever, bye-bye Twitter, it’s been real.

Normal Service Has Been Resumed, Break Out The PG Tips!

Phew, yesterday was a fun ride – last week, there I was all chuffed because the counter had clicked over 100,000, finally, and then yesterday we had something like 7,000 hits in one day, thanks to links from Alternet, Lindsay, and SteveAudio. It’s eased off a bit now and normal teadrinking and faffing about is back, thank goodness.

I’m not really sure I like all the attention – my partner and co-blogger Martin does, though, he’s a bit blogslutty that way. Myself I’m quite fond of the peace of my quiet little corner of the intertubes – it’s got leftist polemic, silly cat pics, squid and a select yet loyal group of regular readers. Who could ask for anything more?

But to new readers, hello, we hope you come back so we can continue to outrage, surprise, annoy and amuse you. I can only hope this newfound, doutless temporary, popularity doesn’t mean I’ll have to get botox :)