Collingwood 🇬🇧 Profile picture
Jan 7, 2022 26 tweets 10 min read Read on X
A THREAD about the #Hypernormalisation of Britain.

In his 2016 documentary film, HyperNormalisation, Adam Curtis explains that by the 1980s, Soviet leaders had realised that their vision for a socialist society had failed. They could not predict accurately and could not...1/n
...micromanage everything. However, they were so involved the system they had built that they could not think of any alternatives. So instead, they pretended that things were getting better as they traveled along the road to a socialist utopia. Aleksi Yurchak...2/n
...the Leningrad-born professor of anthropology at Berkeley, explained what it was like to live through this period in his book, 'Everything Was Forever, Until It Was No More: The Last Soviet Generation'. He wrote that the citizenry knew the leaders were lying; however, the...3/n
...people were themselves trapped in the system, and were therefore unable to imagine anything better. So they pretended to believe the pretending politicians. Society became fake, and Yurchak called this pretence 'HyperNormalisation'. In Britain today, we also know that...4/n
...something isn't right with everything. This feeling was probably sparked in the mid-2000s, when it became clear that our leaders had dragged the country into a bloody war in Iraq on a lie. Shortly after, the global financial system collapsed. Nation states saved the...5/n
...world economy from collapse by pumping vast sums of money into the banking system to repair their ruined balance sheets. Nobody went to jail for this potentially world-shattering catastrophe, just as nobody was punished for Iraq. And those reforms that were undertaken...6/n
...trimmed around the edges rather than questioning the assumptions upon which the systems were built. And then, George Osbourne and David Cameron imposed austerity on Britain, which they said was necessary to maintain the confidence of the markets. Nobody in power...7/n
...bothered to ask whether *we* should still have confidence in the *markets* -- a question every man and woman on the street was asking. It was as though, faced with two calamitous events that made it obvious that their understanding of reality was wrong, the politicians...8/n
...the media, the civil service, the financiers and the think tanks, simply ignored them and continued, like the Soviet Leaders, as though everything was fine. Now, we see such events everywhere and all the time. Nobody, left or right, thinks the government got...9/n
...its response to the pandemic right. It was clear that they were bumbling and bluffing the whole way. The migrant crisis on the South Coast continues even as the head of Border Force says he hates borders. Grooming gangs, which rape and press into sex slavery our...10/n
...most vulnerable daughters, remain at large in our cities. Drugtaking has reached epidemic levels, with the relatively tiny number of prosecutions making little difference. Knife crime and gang culture menaces the law abiding and wastes the potential...11/n
...of countless young men from poor backgrounds. Homelessness can be seen everywhere, and our country has recently been rocked by two child murders. Our leaders seem not only powerless to deal with any of this, but oblivious to it all. Yet, these are mere events. What most...12/n
...of us realise is that our whole structure of national management is broken. Our standard of living is only maintained by the acceptance of ever-greater levels of debt (state and personal). Even then, young middle class people find themselves unable to afford to buy a...13/n
...home, and as prices rise, it dawns on them that they are unlikely to be ever able to afford one. The working class shouldn't even bother dreaming. Our industry, which once provided decent, productive jobs, has disappeared. So much so that we cannot even manufacture...14/n
...PPE or glass vials for vaccines anymore. The British concept of 'fairness' has been replaced (in law) with the alien notion of 'equality', which itself moves toward 'equity', and has manifestly unfair, strange and damaging effects throughout society and its organisation. 15/n
Our education and training system is failing to the extent that universities must be forced to accept state school leavers for undergraduate degrees, and that we are reliant on foreigners to do basic skilled jobs like plumbing, building, HGV driving and even waiting tables...16/n
Children are considerably more likely to have a TV in their bedrooms than a father in the house. 50% of marriages are likely to end in divorce. And yet we know that being raised by two parents is a key metric for childhood, and thence adult, outcomes. Meanwhile, 50 years...17/n
...ago, being wealthy meant a bigger house, a fancier car and a holiday to a more distant destination. Now, it means living in a completely different world, detached from the existence of the rest of us. The response of our political parties has been Hypernormal. The...18/n
...mainstream left has made a weird and unholy alliance with big business and the holders of capital -- first, to encourage the type of individualism and self expression (diversity) that precludes the class solidarity needed for change; secondly, to encourage the...19/n
...importation of cheap migrant labour to hold down wages; and thirdly, to encourage Californian megacorporations to take increasing control over our political discourse. The mainstream right's response has been equally Hypernormal. Their argument for leaving the deepest...20/n
...and most successful free trade bloc in the world seems to have been that it would allow us to do more free trade. It has no concept that people voted for #Brexit (and them) because of the excesses of free trade and free movement of capital. It wails about the effects...21/n
...of 'diversity', and yet it shows no sign, with an 80-seat majority, of taking on the Blair-era Human Rights Act and Equality Act that make reform in this direction near impossible. It talks about family values, but further weakens marriage through legislation. It offers...22/n
...fighting talk on open borders, but takes none of the steps needed to stem the flow on the South Coast. Both main parties are just moving ahead as normal. No matter what they say, their actions are in fact those of people who believe the system should continue as it is...23/n
And We The People are so caught up in this system that despite seeing with our own eyes that something is wrong everywhere, we keep voting for the same outcome. We fear what might happen if we don't (the other side will get in) and lack the imagination to see an alternative. 24/n
But to paraphrase Aleksi Yurchak, Hypernormalisation is forever until it is no more. If we don't ourselves create a decent alternative soon, somebody charismatic well arrive and tell us a seductive story of a great future. But it won't be liberal, conservative, democratic or free
This thread is being widely shared again, so I thought I'd point you all to an excellent short film adaptation the talented @essdeewickett made of it. I was delighted with the result, and I think it's worth watching. Like and share to help Mr Wickett.

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More from @admcollingwood

Feb 19
With the Ukraine war all but lost, and the US set to withdraw its forces, Europe finds itself in its weakest strategic position since 1948--and maybe the 16thC. This thread suggests a bold (and leftfield) solution. But can we find an Adenauer, de Gaulle, Walesa or Churchill?

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This proposal points to a way out of Europe's strategic, and long-term economic, problems. Emotions don't come into it. I'll start with two quotes from the great historian A.J.P. Taylor, from his The Course of German History (1945), to show how quickly feelings can change.

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On Germany Taylor wrote: "Their method has always been the same--extermination. Many of the peoples of Europe have, at one time or another, been exterminators. The French... The Spaniards... The English... But no other people had pursued extermination as a permanent...

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Read 43 tweets
Feb 17
A quick note about this story. What could Britain actually provide?

It's my understanding that Britain could not put even a single division in the field. At a push, we could probably manage two brigades, or ~10,000 fighting men. For context, this is probably less than Ukraine assigned for the defence of a small to medium sized town like Bakhmut.

But that's in theory. In practice, we might not even be able to equip them. In a 2021 war game exercise, the British Army ran out of key munitions in 10 days. And that was before we emptied the arsenal for Ukraine.

For years, British land forces have sought to leverage world class, elite light infantry units and best in class special forces as a useful appendage to US beef in the global war on terror. But commando raids, human terrain expertise and counter insurgency optimisation is very different skillset to that needed to defend fixed positions, counter drone warfare and artillery duels on the Pontic Steppe. (Note the complaints from Ukrainian soldiers about the quality and relevance of training they receive in the west.)

It therefore seems unlikely that the UK can offer anything that could seriously slow down the Russians. The only use of British troops might be that when they are destroyed, it puts the US in a "join the fight or lose NATO" position.

In other words, Starmer's statement is either delusional, virtue signalling, or dangerous. Take your pick.Image
Meanwhile, in Germany it's much the same. When Europeans complain about the US excluding then from negotiations, we know why: Europe has nothing to offer, and will just demand US taxpayers continue doing what Ursula, Keir, Olaf and Emanuel want.

For those who didn't quite believe me when I said that it is ludicrous to think we could deploy very much of anything to Ukraine, here's a man with far greater knowledge than I am making the same point. Except he claims the numbers I used are optimistic.

Read 4 tweets
Nov 8, 2024
What have our catastrophic Ukraine policy, @RoryStewartUK's handwringing about the 'values' involved in the US election, and Labour's dangerous support for the losing side in that election got in common?

The Adolescent Mindset: A Thread about the ruination of Britain.

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The negative side of adolescent behaviour is often characterised by lack of emotional control; swings between hubristic triumphalism and hysterical hopelessness; callowness and certitude at the same time; lack of responsibility; thoughtless risk taking; and a tendency to...

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...be passionate advocates for big, distant causes while ignoring more mundane, small issues. We've all known (and remember being) teenagers. They can be engaging and energising, but can also be prone to wild mood changes (the world is my oyster because I'm going on a...

3/n
Read 35 tweets
Oct 25, 2024
Some plants, when attacked by insects that eat their leaves, secret a scent that attracts the predators of the attacking insects. I can't help but think that something similar has happened in politics over the last 25 years. In the 20th Century, politics in the Anglo...

1/n
...world was ultimately a dance between capital and labour. The outcome was various messy compromises, continuously shifting in favour of one side and then the other. The parties and organisations that backed the workers would take bites out of the interests of the...

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...capital owning class (such as redistributive taxes, unionised pay and conditions negotiations, and the provision of social programmes like healthcare and education). Those who owned capital and businesses, and the libertarian/Thatcher/Reagan/paleoliberal political...

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Read 11 tweets
Oct 23, 2024
A bombshell report, by renowned investigative reporter @mtaibbi and former US Senate investigator @thackerpd, could have serious political and diplomatic ramifications for the UK. This thread explains why, and lists the questions that must be asked of the government.

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Messrs Taibbi and Thacker allege that a whistleblower has provided them with documents which show that a charity closely linked to Sir Keir Starmer's election svengali and current Chief of Staff, Morgan McSweeney, has written plans to "kill Elon Musk's Twitter," "trigger... 2/n Image
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...EU and UK regulatory action," and build closer links with the Biden-Harris Administration. The charity, called Centre for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), was co-founded by Mr McSweeney, who also founded 'Labour Together', which became known as a 'party within a party'...

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Read 29 tweets
Oct 14, 2024
Some thoughts on slavery and reparations.

The saddest thing, I think, about the return of the question of whether Britain should pay reparations for the practice of slavery, now centred on the foreign secretary David Lammy, is the way that such a heinous and sickening...

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...practice has been politicised. It is, when one thinks for even a moment about what went on in the trans-Atlantic slave trade, and the scale of suffering involved, hugely affecting and a stain on our national story. Yet the tone of the debate somehow inures us to the...

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...details of this horror. Nevertheless, it is understandable that Britons are angered by the tone and form of the demands. It is implied that Britain should pay reparations absent of any broadly accepted legal framework, or even international norms, to deal with such...

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Read 18 tweets

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