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Awake, awake O sleeper of the land of shadows, wake! expand
I am in you, and you in me, mutual in love divine
Fibres of love from man to man thro' Albion's pleasant land
William Blake :Jerusalem
There is a place where Contrarieties are equally true
William Blake: Milton
AS I'M writing this the first of
many mountain-sized chunks of rock will be plunging headlong
into the thick, gaseous stew of Jupiter's swirling mass, sending
a huge plume of matter and radiation into the Solar System.
Everyone I know is talking about it. It may be the most
important cosmic event of the last 2,000 years. My friend Joe,
an Astrologer, tells me that the resulting explosions will
release what he calls "Jovian forces" into the Solar System, by
which he means peace, justice and natural goodness.
Consciousness will change, he tells me. And he quotes the song
from Hair to prove it: "When the Moon is in the seventh house,
and Jupiter aligns with Mars, then peace will guide the planets,
and love will steer the stars." According to Joe this is pretty
much the configuration as the cataclysm erupts.
What has this to do with politics? Everything.
The point is, Joe, who has never felt the need to express
himself politically before, will be on the March and Rally
against the Criminal Justice Bill on the 24th of July. As will
assorted Pagans, Witches, Druids, Tarot-readers, Buddhists,
Celtic tribes and English posses, travellers, ravers, dossers,
space-cowboys, self-proclaimed gurus, pranksters, visionaries,
poets, as well as the usual assortment of lefties, anarchists
and professional protesters. A measure of Joe's previous
political involvement is a conversation we once had about a
particular field that was threatened by a new by-pass. Joe
wanted to stop the road. I suggested I could help him. "No
thanks," he said. "I'll meditate in the field and create an
invisible psychic barrier." Joe has also been known to proclaim
himself immortal.
Justice, peace and natural goodness. However you put it,
whatever the rhetoric that leads up to it, whatever the
structures of thought, justice, peace and natural goodness is
what we all want and what we all need. And anyone who states
these things as his or her principles, and acts upon them, is
one of us. Simple.
To me this is the essence of the new politics. Here's an
analogy. It's as if we've reached a cross-roads in human
evolution, or in political life. There are a number of choices
open to us, some of them exceedingly dangerous. It's fairly
pointless standing round debating how we all got here. What we
need to do is work out where we go next. The world is full of
rhetoric. Political, spiritual, scientific rhetoric. The first
thing we have to admit is that we really don't know all that
much. It's fundamental that there are people around us we can
trust. Anyone can adopt a stance. What matters is the intention
behind the words.
Joe is not a nutter, by the way - the usual description for
anyone whose belief-structures are different than ours - he is
perfectly sane, chases women, drinks beer, watches the Soaps
like the rest of us. These are his beliefs, that's all, just as
Marxism is a belief, or the idea that we are all simply
accidental lumps of matter running round like headless chickens
with no other purpose than to reproduce and then die. Belief is
one of the things that defines us as human beings.
Marxism is a belief, I said. Of course the Marxists would deny
that. Marx himself, humanitarian though he was, was also deeply
enamoured of the mythology of 19th century materialist science,
and the idea that, one day, all things would be reduced to
simple, non-contradictory laws. This in itself is a faith. In
the 20th century science itself took us into areas where
apparent contradictions exist concurrently. Is light formed of
waves or particles? Depending on your point of view it can
appear as either one or the other. In fact it is both at the
same time. Are human beings distinguished by consciousness or
production, asks Marx? And he answers the question: by
production, by work. And from this first step the socialist
movements that followed him proceed relentlessly along a line
that takes us into work, work and more work. Cultural expression
is an irrelevance and can be ignored. Joy, celebration, pleasure
are the gaseous by-products of the digestive processes of
labour: consciousness as fart.
- But does Marx really know that production is the
distinguishing factor of human existence? Is work the only
thing? -
My profoundest political revelation (is revelation the
revolution of the mind?) came not during a strike, or at a
committee meeting to discuss the future of socialism: it came at
a rave. The event was held deep in the Sussex countryside,
nestled high in the soft folds of a chalk escarpment, hidden
away in a little bowl of land like a natural amphitheatre. We
took our drugs and danced to the pulsing beat. I took my shoes
off at one point to feel the cool grasses tickling my feet. The
summer breezes bustled about my limbs, warm and relaxing, and
tiny shivers ran up my spine. This was heaven, the perfect union
of body and mind, of earth and air, of personal expression and
communion with others. Some months later I went back to visit
the place. There was no sign that anything had ever happened
there.
- So what is work? -
The labour that the DIY crew put into the event was real enough.
Planning it, shifting gear, clearing up afterwards. And the
joyous expression of dance certainly cost a lot of energy. But
what did we make on that occasion? Nothing but love.
But afterwards I knew, with an understanding that went deeper
than the rational, that the land was truly mine, all of the
land, all mine and all everyone else's at the same time; that
the land contained ecstasy, beauty, sensuality, love, and that
the pulsing heart beat of the music was rippling through her
body like a shiver and that she was being awakened by it. Take
it or leave it: it is my belief.
OF COURSE Karl Marx's theories are based in part upon his
observations of the British Working Class during a crucial
period of political and economic change. Frederick Engels
actually owned a factory in Manchester and his Condition Of The
English Working Class is a seminal work of 19th century social
observation. But what is the most abiding contribution that the
British Working Class have made to the state of Britain and to
the world as a whole? Trade Unionism? To some degree, though we
have seen how self seeking the leadership can be, and how
fragile and inept the structures of economic dissent. The
National Health Service? Perhaps, though the drug companies seem
to do a lot better out of it than the rest of us. The Labour
Party? At one time maybe, though the current fraternisation with
the City of London - Champagne Socialism - makes you question
where their loyalties really lie. Or is it something else? Isn't
there another thing that working class history has given us, not
just the British people, but the world as a whole?
- I'll tell you what it is: it is football. -
Of all the things formulated in the golden age of British
Imperialism, when Britain was the world economic power, and the
engineers of Birmingham and the cotton workers of Manchester
were producing goods that would help reshape the world, the only
thing that has lasted is football. And what working class
community does not play football these days? And what is
football but a strange ritual performance involving 22 men and a
ball, surrounded by taboos and fetishes, on which the whole
world's hopes and fears are pinned, like an icon, like a
religion? What is it but cultural expression?
Who is to say really what the earliest human beings were
thinking when producing the first artefacts? Did they sing as
they did so? Did they perform magical acts? When the first
animal was brought down by the first arrow, did it feel like
sport? And did they dance around the fire afterwards with the
sheer joy of being alive?
Joy and labour are not separable things. Cultural expression and
means of production are from the same source. Humanity is not a
machine wedded to work but a living, breathing act of
consciousness, expressive of joy. The world is a better place
than we imagine.
The new politics arises precisely out of this awareness. People
don't go on demos these days, they celebrate. They don't
protest, they party. 23rd July, Hailli Sellasi's birthday: the
Kent Freedom to Party, Travel and Protest Campaign held a
"Picnic against the Criminal Justice Bill" on Folkestone
Pleasure Beach, including a March to Lobby Michael Howard's
surgery. Like so many of the events taking place in this current
period it was characterised by a genuine party atmosphere.
Dancing, drums, good natured banter, chants that owed more to
their rhythmical qualities than to their content, whistles,
war-whoops, a lot of noise: what you might call, in old
fashioned terms "good vibes".
THE main point was that people were enjoying it. It was fun. In
a sense even the word "politics" is misleading. A substantial
segment of the current movement would not see their actions in
political terms at all. For them it is a spiritual commitment,
to the Earth, our Mother. Theirs is an expression of love, of
sorrow at the pain and joy at the beauty of our world. And their
fundamental understanding is not that they are facing the blind
structures of Capitalism, but manifest evil. There are black
magicians out there, in control, behind the scenes, people who
understand perfectly well the energy systems of the Earth and
who are channelling dark energy to destroy her. For both sides
materialism is a front, a myth that the rest of us have bought,
Capitalist and Communist alike, and through which the secret
societies manipulate our very thoughts.
Someone told me a wonderful story. Apparently George Bush is a
member of a secret society called the Skull and Bones Club.
George Bush's father actually stole the skull of Geronimo, and
even now acolytes drink from it in memory of the defeat of this
celebrated nomad. But as part of the admission ceremony you have
to lie naked in a black coffin with your genitals tied up with
ribbon while you recite your sexual experiences to the assembled
audience. Picture it: George Bush, future President of the
United States of America, one day to become the world's most
powerful man, with the entire might of the US war-machine at his
disposal, lying naked in a coffin with his genitals tied. Maybe
this explains as well as anything the motives behind the Gulf
War. I don't care if the story is true or not. I'm only glad
that someone told it to me.
And maybe there are Black Magician's channelling negative energy
into the Earth, who can tell? Better to be safe than sorry. And
it's in anticipation of this that the exponents of the new
politics - the eco-warriors and pagan travellers of Little
Solsbury Hill and Twyford Down - perform their own magic
rituals. May 1st on Solsbury Hill, the Donga Tribe built a
"Wicker-digger" from sticks, set fire to it, and leapt through
the flames. July 2nd, Twyford Down: balls of wool (unfortunately
some of them acrylic) were cast around the crowd to create a web
of unity and to remind us of the sheep that have for centuries
shaped the landscape.
- Gobbledegook, you say? Who cares? Fun, frolic and celebration
in the sunshine, I say. -
But it goes further than this too. If through ritual magic we
can free the human spirit, then it is more than mad frolics: it
is essential to the progress of consciousness on this planet.
Magic empowers, prayer diminishes. In magic you depend on
yourself. In prayer you depend on the good will and intervention
of a higher authority. The practice of magic is the
psychological anticipation of a world of self-determination. The
practice of prayer is the psychological reflection of this world
of disempowerment. Again I cite the Donga Tribe. On July 2nd
many of the women of the tribe were bare-breasted, and there was
something absolutely extraordinary in this. Not the sight of
breasts - we see these on beaches the world over, lying inert,
soaking up the sun - but whole women, straight-backed and proud
in a mixed crowd of generally clothed people, staring the world
in the eye. I must admit it made me shy, like a little boy not
knowing where to look. I caught one woman's eye. She smiled at
me and her eyes gave off little electric sparkles like a static
charge, and I knew she knew exactly how I was feeling. The new
politics is new because it is innovative and arresting and
because it challenges all the assumptions we make about
ourselves and others. It is more than politics, it is love.
- These women have no need of legislation or the censorship of
Political Correctness. They prove themselves stronger than men
in everything they do. -
I said the new politics isn't really about politics. Actually
it's not even new. There's a history there. It's a culmination.
The roots go back to the 60s (doesn't everything?) and many of
the elder statesmen of the current movement are happy to recite
their 60s credentials. And if anyone doubts the historical
relevance (resonance) of that decade, they only have to meet
people too old or too emotionally restricted to have enjoyed
those heady days when they were upon us. Prior to the 60s people
may have had sex before marriage, but then they ran guiltily to
the nearest registry office once the tests proved positive, and
had to live through years of unhappy marriage as a consequence.
Prior to the 60s people did not grow their hair, or come out
openly as homosexuals, or experiment with lifestyles or drugs or
political and communal options. They stayed within limits. And
all of the emotional and sexual freedoms that we now cherish
(loving friendships, partnership not ownership) have their roots
in the sexual revolution that those years brought. Revolution is
not too big a word. The world was changed as a consequence.
- Revolution, you see, is not necessarily about overthrowing
governments. It can also describe abiding social and cultural
change. -
One of the great qualities of that era was that politics was
fun. It was full of scams and taunts and it mixed its metaphors
no end. The Yippies tried to levitate the Whitehouse as a
protest against the Vietnam war, and put up a pig for President.
Oz magazine was irreverent and spooky and packed with wild
graphics. Slogans were off the wall and witty with a sometimes
strange resonance. One I remember came from the 68 Paris
revolution. "Under the cobbles, the beach" it said. What does
that mean? Partly, that beneath these civilised structures lies
a simpler reality. But you can imagine some tripped-out
revolutionary picking out a cobble to chuck at the lines of riot
police, and finding the bedding sand beneath. "Wow, man: the
beach!"
- The trouble with the 60s, though, is that they came to an end.
-
As yet there was no distinction between the search for personal
and political emancipation. The two things went hand-in-hand.
Timothy Leary wrote a book called "The Politics of Ecstasy." And
there you have it: in a nutshell. Later the movement divided
into what Tom Wolfe called the Me Generation and The New Left
(Radical Chic). And it is this division we have lived with ever
since. The New Left became ever more relentlessly Marxist and
materialist until they were indistinguishable from the old left.
The Me Generation - what became known as the New Age - turned to
crystals, aromatherapy, Buddhist chants, and began to scorn
politics altogether, as beneath them. Both approaches were
flawed.
The movement fragmented. All you had left was lifestyles. Me:
I'm into motorbikes and black leather and a girl with a tattoo
on the pillion. Me: I'm into Transcendental Meditation and free
love and I think I'll open a carpet emporium. Me: I'm into Karl
Marx and the revolution, and that cushy job as a sociology
lecturer at the nearest red-brick university. Me: I've taken so
many drugs I get lost in my own toilet. Me: I just give up.
But one thing held: the festivals. Glastonbury, the Windsor Free
Festival, The People's Free Festival, Stonehenge until '85, as
well as countless Albion Fayres, small gatherings the length and
breadth of the British Isles. Punk came along, a new urban
rebellious spirit, and rejected the hippies as Boring Old Farts.
But even they joined in the end. Travelling became a lifestyle,
moving from festival to festival during the summer months,
scraping a degree of self-sufficiency and a suntan from these
sterile Islands. Travellers were and still are the heart of the
movement, whether as Hendrix-inspired psychedelic gypsies, or as
politically motivated Mutant hordes, or as Crusties with a
drug-habit: they kept the thing going.
Travellers have always had a political agenda, whether they know
it or not. But it's a negative agenda: rejection. The travelling
lifestyle says simply: "Fuck your low paid jobs, your miserable,
low-grade housing, your rooted, sedentary lifestyle, your
Ping-Pong politics of deception, your wars, your poverty, your
loneliness, your despair. I'm gonna get a bus and watch the
sunset from a hilltop whether you like it or not." Like the
official propaganda on drugs, it just says no. I spoke to
travellers on a wooded site somewhere in the South of England. I
asked them why they travelled. "What's the choice?" said one of
the girls. "A crummy bedsit."
Other things happened in the intervening years, of course. There
was the Anti-Nazi League in the 70s, Peace Camps in the 80s, The
Miner's Strike of 84-85, the Poll-Tax Protests that brought down
Thatcher. They all served to keep the rebellious spirit alive.
But they were still all essentially negative. No to this, and no
to that. The synergistic moment - to me - comes when rave meets
the festivals and all heaven is let loose. All of a sudden the
answer is yes. Yes, yes, yes, emphatically yes!
RAVE was and is about as non-political as you can get. If
anything it was welded to the ideals of Thatcherism. Early Acid
House party organisers made big bucks running illegal
pay-parties in fields and warehouses. The so-called second
summer of love in 88 was one long hedonistic binge. But it was
joyful. It was spiritual. And it was positive.
What was first class about it is that these people really knew
how to throw a party. The music was good: no more crap amateur
bands trudging through pedestrian versions of ancient songs.
New, interesting, vibrant sounds fresh out of the USA, a sampled
amalgam of deep soul R'n'B and sparkling Salsa. The equipment
was good: a 10k solid wall of sound to unfurl your intestines,
rather than the Woolworth's stereo with one blown speaker I
remember. The effects were good: swirls of fractal images, smoke
machines and lasers, rather than a single, naked red bulb and a
Hendrix album cover. And the drugs were good too, of course:
warm, heart-swelling MDMA, enough to make you fall in love
forever... or until the next party, that is. No violence. No
sexual rivalry. No meat-market. Just human beings, dancing and
having fun.
- People say drugs are bad for you. But so's living in a drab
council estate with no money and no prospects. So are motorways.
So is breathing their noxious fumes. -
The pay-parties became licensed Raves and entry fees went
through the roof, and more and more people were excluded, until
someone came up with the bright idea of doing it themselves.
Only to discover that people had been doing it themselves for
decades. Rave met the festivals. The party had just begun.
I often think of these events as like the Ghost Dance, the last
ecstatic-despairing expression of the Native American Peoples
before they gave in and crawled back to the miserable
culture-crushing welfare-drudgery of the Reservations.
FROM the late-1880s to the mid-1890s the Indians danced. They
danced and danced and danced. Danced to ecstasy, to drive the
white man from the spacious plains, to bring back the buffalo,
to shake off despair. In my romantic moments I imagine that the
sounds of their footsteps have resonated ever since, to emerge
in this great party spirit that unites us now: new tribalism,
new communion, new consciousness. The Party party: political
spirituality. Action Yoga, as a friend of mine puts it:
emancipation of the self through collective action.
The only way to properly define the new politics is to compare
it to the old politics. Politics was, and always will be, a dull
affair. Committee meetings, endless wrangles, pompous,
meaningless speeches, being forced to work with people you don't
like, and certainly don't trust. Committees for this and
committees for that. The EC of the GC. Strings of
incomprehensible letters: EEC, RCP, TCP, DDT. And of course
there's always a certain person that loves all of this, who can
tell you who was who on what committee in what year; eats,
sleeps, dreams and dies by committee, and who scorns anyone who
can't hack it. Talking shops, talks about talks, and then talks
to discuss the outcome of talks. In the end you give up. Anyway,
what's the point, nothing ever changes? A vote for Labour is a
vote for yet another potential criminal to get his hands on the
purse-strings. Can you really believe that the Labour Party, the
Liberal Party, or any other Party will ever do anything, even if
they have all the good will in the world? Do you really expect
the super-rich to give away power because a Labour Prime
Minister goes to them, cap-in-hand, to beg a few crumbs? Isn't
it far more likely that he'll keep the crumbs for himself, or
find a cushy little pay off for himself in Brussels even if he
never gets to be Prime Minister? Democracy is about empowering
someone else and then praying that they don't turn out to be too
corrupt.
The new politics is about self-empowerment. It's about tribes
not structures. What's a tribe? A tribe is a network of friends
who've gone through the same things as you. That way you know
you can trust them. It's intuitive, not legislative. People are
"sound" because you sense they are, not because they show you a
set of white teeth and say all the right things. More than at
any time in my life I truly feel that I'm surrounded by my
brothers and sisters.
That was the atmosphere on the March and Rally on the 24th. A
mobile sea of humanity, all brothers and sisters, all beautiful.
Someone shouted to a scowling police officer, "Smile, it doesn't
cost anything," which merely deepened the scowl. I asked the
officer what he thought when the guy had said that. "Same as I'm
thinking now about you: go away!" But generally even the police
were OK. Some sporadic violence, most of it more symbolic than
real. A couple of hundred people attempted to force the gates of
Downing Street, and actually managed to make the foundations
creak. I saw only one arrest, someone who fell down on the wrong
side of the gates and who was summarily punished by the
quivering riot police as a consequence. Aside from that, just
one long, happy party. I overheard someone on the tube. "You're
never too old to have a happy childhood,"he said.
The new politics is about change, it's about freedom, it's about
liberty. "Freedom to travel, party and protest," as my mate Tim
has it. But freedom from want too, from oppression, from
ridiculous waste. The CJB has united us through it's ineptitude,
it's stupidity and it's vicious petty-mindedness. But it shows
simply and clearly the prejudices and hang-ups of it's authors,
and clarifies - for the first time for many people - that the
government can be as out-of-control as any of us. If the
government can't govern wisely, why do we allow them to govern
us at all? It leads us to question the very foundations of
government itself.
I don't mind saying it: we're moving into a New Age. Either that
or we're all Party Lemmings dancing off the edge of the world.
But at least we'll die happy.
The new politics is about revolution. All that refers to is the
cycle of change, the turning of the great wheel. This can be
Buddhist or Taoist or anything you like. Either we change things
or we're finished. And there's no time left for debates or
factions or Royal Commissions on the state of the environment on
nice fat salaries: jobs for the boys. Cars stop or we all stop.
Society changes or there'll be no society.
But it's optimistic though. There's a new spirit about, a new
consensus. The road-protesters have shown us a way, ancient
though it is, and with unity with the railway workers it could
become an unstoppable force. The solution is non-violent direct
action. Refuse to believe in the structures of madness anymore.
Just say no. And then afterwards, with your friends at the
party, you can shout yes, yes, yes and dance till you drop!
As DH Lawrence put it in a poem titled A Sane Revolution:
If you make a revolution, make it for fun,
don't do it in ghastly seriousness,
don't do it in deadly earnest,
do it for fun...
Don't do it, anyhow, for international Labour.
Labour is the one thing a man has too much of.
Let's abolish labour, let's have done with labouring!
Work can be fun, and men can enjoy it; then it's not labour.
Let's have it so! Let's make a revolution for fun! |