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PigSociety UK - The English Riots 2011

Alcuin Bramerton

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A photograph. And another image here. On Saturday 6th August 2011, the most serious street riots seen in England for decades began in Tottenham, North London. The trigger seems to have been the unprovoked police shooting of Mark Duggan (29), on Thursday 4th August 2011, in a botched, Keystone Cops-style operation in Ferry Lane, Tottenham Hale. Duggan, travelling in a minicab, was killed by a single gunshot to the chest. In English street slang, the police are called "pigs".

In the days which followed, sporadic rioting broke out in several other areas of London (Croydon, Brixton, Clapham Junction, Peckham, Wood Green, Chingford, East Ham, Lavender Hill, Islington, Enfield, Hackney, Ealing, Lewisham, Bromley etc) and in several other English cities, including Bristol, Gloucester, Birmingham, Leicester, Nottingham, Leeds, Manchester, Salford, Liverpool and Birkenhead.

The English riots shared some features in common with those seen earlier in 2011 in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Jordan, Greece, Spain, Israel and Ireland. An unemployed, disadvantaged and politically neglected youth underclass took to the streets and caused anarchic mayhem.

Theirs was a decisive, if inchoate, response to a corrupt, toff-riddled and sleazy political class living in denial behind the curve, and to a corrupt and sleazy law enforcement system perceived as a phone-hacking, freedom-trampling branch of white collar, media-supported, organised crime. Or something. Nobody seems quite sure.

The élite-imposed "austerity" programmes designed by the UK government to milk the general population to save the banks, and the brutish and intrusive psychology of control introduced under cover of the fake Bush-Blair "war against terror" propaganda have, in recent times, alienated the UK youth underclass and much of Middle England.

In the UK, the national and local political classes are out of touch, societally impotent, and unable to control their Rothschild bankster overlords in the City of London. While there was much opportunist looting, covert agent provocateur destabilisation and plain criminality swirling around the 2011 English riots, the energy behind the unrest was much deeper and purer.

The UK establishment is rightly seen as a busted flush. And in England, as elsewhere in the world, people have had enough, are kicking against the pricks, and are agitating for radical change. Unless the positive energy of global revolution is given a coherent executive voice in UK polity, the City of London will burn, Westminster will burn, Downing Street will burn, and Buckingham Palace will burn.

Such cleansing fires may sound unlikely, unwise and un-English. But the English nation at large is changing fast while its minority establishment class remains ossified in visible dinosaurian anachronism. Judges in wigs. A toff Prime Minister from Eton with a private income. A geriatric Queen with too many palaces. Major corporations evading corporation tax. Stasi-style surveillance. Nazi policing.

The English people have had their taxes, pensions and jobs stolen by successive US-allied war-mongering governments, their houses and savings stolen by the banks, their health stolen by a dysfunctional, allopathic National Health "Service", and their youth stolen by an examination-obsessed and irrelevant education system.

It will not take much, now, for the best within England to turf out the worst. The English people are more than the establishment class and they are better than the establishment class. And perhaps more important, they know this. They sense the trembling end-time fragility of the old order. And they have no patience left for fear.

Meanwhile, in orchestrated denial, or self-delusion, the English establishment and the mainstream media, led by the BBC, are doing all they can to pretend that the English riots of 2011 are nothing more than petty criminality plus police incompetence. Earlier in 2011, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and Hosni Mubarak made similar miscalculations.

More English background and analysis here (10.08.11), here (10.08.11), here (10.08.11), here 10.08.11), here (10.08.11) and here (09.08.11).

Aug. 10, 2011

http://alcuinbramerton.blogspot.com/2011/04/altnews7-1ab-alcuin-alcuin-bramerton.html