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What Really Worries Me About the London Riots

Posted: 08/17/11 04:01 PM ET

When I was a teenage juvenile delinquent, a story made the rounds of my friends about some hoodlums who had broken into a trailer in Collingwood, drank whatever booze was in the cupboards, stole everything valuable, then trashed the place.

They decided to record all the fun they were having, so they brought along an Instamatic. And when they left with their loot, they forgot the camera.

We thought the story was funny as hell. Today, with rioters posting their cell phone pictures on Facebook and video of their crimes on Youtube, kids don't get the joke anymore.

The Colllingwood thieves may well be respectable, rehabilitated members of society. If they are, they're probably shaking their heads about those awful brats in England. Someone should do something about those thugs, people say.

And now something is being done. It shouldn't be too long before the British government comes for the photocopiers and starts yanking out electricity poles. After all, they'll have already targeted Blackberries and Twitter.

That should solve the problem of youths rioting in the streets of the poorer parts of the country's cities. After all, no one ever rioted without being told how to.

Indeed. Britain has a long tradition of ugly riots, insurrections and outright revolution. Bad elements of British society killed two kings in "hunting accidents," killed another one by thrusting a hot poker up his tush, stabbed two more, smothered one, and chopped the head off another. The Brits had a bad rep in the Middle Ages for being ungovernable regicides, despite the heads of traitors and rebels that were stuck on big sticks over the gates and bridges in most major towns.

In 1778, some 60,000 rioters caused mayhem in downtown London, burning homes, attacking embassies, and wrecking two prisons, Newgate and the Clink. The body count was more than 200 dead. The reason for the riot? A government plan to give more rights to Roman Catholics.

In the here and now, Britain has become a country with millions of unemployed and unemployable youths. The government schools are shameful and do not educate. Power and money still flow to people whose families can afford to send them to expensive private schools, which are the gatekeepers of the "Oxbridge" education that is the dividing line between the "haves" and the rest.

Now, it's easier and more cost-effective to hire eager, tidy Polish immigrants for service jobs than to employ British youth, many of whom are proudly illiterate, xenophobic and grossly tattooed. The old jobs that poor Brits used to settle for -- textile factory work, mining, manual labor -- are long gone, either exported to the Third World or replaced by machines.

The poor -- who are hardly Dickensian poor, but who are effectively barred from what we would consider a middle-class life -- are effectively visitors in their own country.

So let's blame the Blackberry. After all, Research In Motion's got enough troubles already, and tagging the Canadian company with a few riots by yobs and gangstas will be marked in Waterloo as just another bunch of bummers in an already bad year.

And who can't help but blame Twitter? Maybe street thugs like it for the same reason I don't: it's the ultimate in vain self-promotion. Facebook seems to be off the hook, since the cops are probably relying on people to post evidence of their own crimes in their photo albums.

Britain joins a very interesting list of places that want to throttle the Internet and its hardware to prevent trouble in the streets. China, Iran, Mubarak's Egypt, and Cuba share British prime minister David Cameron's view that both the messenger and the message must be blamed. Closed circuit TVs on every corner and even along public beaches is not enough.

Taking Internet access from poor people should quell the fires of revolt. Soon, they'll respect their betters. They won't mind the bank bailouts, the crooked media that tapped people's phones, the hard-wired class structure that cuts down people with the wrong family background, the wrong accent, the wrong education.

The British riots scare people throughout the developed world. There are critics of multiculturalism who say the riots show immigration doesn't work, but seeing white, black and brown people looting and burning together showed me diversity is working fine in some quarters. The real worries come from knowing that not only is there a large underclass that may never work, might never pay taxes, and will take whatever opportunities arise to grab an iPad and burn down the store that sells it.

And realizing that this generation, raised in a post-literate, post-9/11 world of anti-terror laws, bailouts, recessions and the tightening of the screws of the state are the same people we're expecting to cover our pensions.

 
When I was a teenage juvenile delinquent, a story made the rounds of my friends about some hoodlums who had broken into a trailer in Collingwood, drank whatever booze was in the cupboards, stole every...
When I was a teenage juvenile delinquent, a story made the rounds of my friends about some hoodlums who had broken into a trailer in Collingwood, drank whatever booze was in the cupboards, stole every...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
patrickwwalker
02:50 PM on 08/18/2011
The world is increasingly getting worse. It's no longer about education or merit that determines access to a good life but exactly which crotch you popped out of.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Glass Cannon
Let every eye negotiate for itself.
12:15 PM on 08/18/2011
How about we applaud those millions in poor circumstances that did NOT burn, loot and assault?

Coming from a background not unlike that of some of these rioters, I can tell you that the only way out of poverty and unemployment is this: hard work (at any job you get), learning to read and then reading as much as possible so you can gain a better understanding of the world, and then looking for whatever opportunities present themselves.

You will not prosper if you look for a handout, if you don't tackle every challenge you have with energy, and if you strike out at people and perform destructive acts against others or yourself.

So good on those millions that do not riot, and who are looking something better tomorrow!
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SayBlade
This micro bio intentionally left blank.
12:00 AM on 08/19/2011
Even a good education, hard work, loads of experience and a fine upstanding record of citizenship may not be enough to get you a job or ensure you ability to provide for yourself. When times are tough it's not what you know, it's who you know.

Stop treating people like errant children and they won't riot.
11:51 AM on 08/18/2011
Why are you worried about your pension? Are the British citizenry paying into it?
That must be some pension plan you have.
If you are insinuating that it will happen here and that the generation coming up will not
be able to function, then I think you are mistaken.
Unlike their British cousins, the majority of young people in Canada are educated, entrepreneurial
and tenacious. Im sorry you worry about your pension, must be nice to have one.
11:19 AM on 08/18/2011
Having witnessed a few riots in my day I can say that it's never just one "youthful mob" acting in unison in spite what the media reports. There are factions to any riot/protest and the size and make-up of these factions changes. It usually starts with peaceful protesters. Then there are the politically motivated provocateurs who aggressively stand-up to police. (There may be a few plain-clothed police provocateurs thrown in as well. I witnessed this at theG20). Then finally come the looters whose only motivation is violent fun and free stuff. Inevitably the press reports only on the looters. And the politicians and police press that point - exploiting the wealthier public's knee-jerk desire for peace and order at any price. Any notion of what the orginal protest was about conveniently disappears. Nothing changes. Why should it?
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john frodo
armchair expert
09:02 AM on 08/18/2011
very well said. Its asymmetric urban warfare, a chain is only as strong as its weakest link.
08:30 AM on 08/18/2011
We as a people on planet earth probaly will never truly unite as one until Aliens from space attack us. I bet that would unite humanity in a way that our world has never seen.

I only fear that if that time comes it may be too late. We better get our act together and stop trying to control our neighbors. We need to focus on making the planet a better place by working together to advance our lives into the abyss and beyond.
frank1946
Tell the Truth
01:34 AM on 08/18/2011
Not to Worry...............they Dream about Unions and Tarriff Quotas !

Tax the Rich Old Chap ! It's all there is now !
11:26 PM on 08/17/2011
First they came for Facebook and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a facebooker.
Then they came for Twitter and I didn't speak out because I don't tweet.
Then they came for the mobiles and I didn't speak out because I have a hardline.
Then they came for me and there was no way to tell the world.

I hope pastor Martin Niemöller forgives my butchering his beautifully written regrets.
newshoundmama
My bite's worse than my bark
10:26 PM on 08/17/2011
Soon, the governments will also want to ban the printing press. . .then they'll come for your pens, pencils and chalk.
We likely won't have two pennies to rub together by the time that happens, but maybe we'll still be able to rub two sticks together, and organize a revolution with smoke signals.
04:36 PM on 08/17/2011
Although the author's worry about his pension is quite valid, what worries me is that we won't have to worry about our pensions if we continue on the path we are now on. We don't have to look very closely to realize that we are on the fast-track to self-destruction. The longer we keep on treating each other with hate, the bigger the blows we will inflict on ourselves and humanity at large. Ever heard of the butterfly effect?

The people going out to the streets right now aren't all doing it because they want to. Rather, a lot of people are doing such things out of an internal sensation of helplessness and lack of hope for the future. In fact, I recently read an article here on the Huff about the London police's dismay at the so-called-looters' profiles - many were regular people, with good jobs and seemingly normal lives. So, why are they out there rioting and looting? Something's majorly wrong.

Is there a solution to the crisis we are seeing among all strata of society? I believe, yes. Maybe if we start treating each other as if though we are all part of one global family, we will instill a sense of purpose in ourselves, and also in the people around us, including those who are already unhappy enough to take to the streets and riot. The answer lies in unity and a true, concern for the needs of others, not our own.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
arkymorgan
Nobody knows the trouble I've been...
05:32 PM on 08/17/2011
I think there is a growing sense that western society is on its last legs, that the old 'rules' only are applied as punishments to the underclass, and that one might as well get while the getting's good. Anarchy tendsto flourish in times when the ruled see the rulers as unprincipled thugs, and decide there is no point left in toeing the line.
10:01 PM on 08/17/2011
Most of these rioters/looters don't watch or read the news and wouldn't understand it if they did. They have no idea nor interest in what is happening in their city or the world around them. Blaming their actions on the greedy, dishonest politicians, bankers and corporations gives them too much credit. Feral is the right description.
02:08 PM on 08/18/2011
Sounds like boredom and some twisted need to be a 'reality youtube' star or something. Based on what little I can stand to see of TV these days, it's the most sensationalistic lowbrow tripe that floats it's pungent way to the top of the ratings and popular concious these days. So for lack of anything constructive or interesting to do the go for a bit of the ultraviolence, the closest they may have felt to being alive and living their own life in quite some time.