|
Looks
as though we’ve got ourselves a convoy
Well-Pitched Notes On The
Autumn 2000 Fuel Protests Towards Recomposing & Orchestrating Working Class
Harmonisation On A Major Scale

|
A
TRACTOR CUTS ACROSS A PRAIRIE FIELD "So shall ye reap" |
Music to our ears,
it came out of the blue: a sudden eruption of direct action on the motorways and
around the oil refineries in Scotland, Wales and England by truckers and small
farmers in early September 2000. It came out of the blues as well: after the
I990s, the worst years these islands had experienced in centuries on the
industrial strike/urban rioting front, finally something was happening. That "something"
which people everywhere felt in their own perception of what was happening
also tended to change the shifting character of this raw protest A welcome drift
was taking place. Its strength was that it took everyone by surprise. The State
didn’t have time to get its act together, the police let it happen whilst the
oil companies hoped to take advantage of the actions.
Various Leftists have tried to make comparisons of the police
attitude during the miners’ strike and their laisser-faire attitude during the
fuel blockades. They stupidly forgot that Thatcher had prepared the police for
the miners strike several years beforehand, whereas the government this time
round were caught completely off guard. In the absence of any clear commands
from Straw and Blair, local cops, preferring an easy life, just let it happen.
"Well, the cops in France don’t intervene, so why should we", they
thought, perhaps. (In fact, the French cops often do get heavy, on at
least one occasion threatening blockaders with guns pointed at their heads, but
British propaganda never mentions this)
Many of the poor supported this movement not because they
really cared about the price of fuel (although they certainly cared about the
knock-on effect of high fuel prices) but because it was an attack on the misery
of normality: though the blockaders hadn’t really intended it, the commodity
economy virtually came to a standstill. Whilst many of the less ideologically
befuddled poor supported this movement, it was left to the professional
middle-class to denounce the blockaders (most of whom earned peanuts compared to
these well. paid professional liars) as "greedy" and
"voracious". Endlessly repeating this inversion of the facts, however,
may well have the desired effect of undermining support for the next round of
protest. During the miners’ strike, occasionally miners would sneer at
Scargill for "driving up to Orgreave in his chauffeur-driven car and
getting himself arrested" - but they weren’t very public about such
criticisms. Probably there are a few protestors privately cursing the Land Rover/BMW/
Merc-driving bosses who made up 20% of the blockaders, but unless they
are public about such class antagonism people will get a clear impression of a
harmony of interests and radical support will evaporate. As for those anarchists
and ultra-leftists who denounced the whole thing because it was a "cross
class alliance", strange that they fail to point this contradiction out
when they get involved in Reclaim the Streets. Perhaps it’s because they hope
that RTS will provide them with fertile ground for recruits to anarchist
ideology, whereas the fuel protests entailed looking at things afresh, not so
simplistically. And wasn’t the Poll Tax movement also a cross class alliance?
Any anarchist who’d have used such an argument at that time as an excuse to
not get stuck in would have been dismissed as an arrogant twat. But now, after
10 years of relentless counter-revolution, so-called revolutionaries, like much
of the rest of the population, are so entrenched in their petrified ideas that
they are incapable of recognising the complexities of something new even if it
jumped down their throats.
It didn’t fit into existing categories and that disturbed
all those who love socially descriptive paradigms from where one can hurl abuse:
"petit bourgeois entrepeneurs ", "small business people
", "anti-ecology numbskulls" etc. Really though, it
was more than abuse that was delivered by all the leftist/liberal news media; it
was downright rubbishing. They were either right wing French Poujadists - the
fascist inspired small shopkeepers and what have you - from the mid-50s or. like
the Chilean truckers who helped topple Allende bringing in the military
dictatorship of Pinochet. Essentially, they were thick, stupid, St Georges’
flag-waving, asylum-baiting, anti-union, greedy, planet-polluting animals — no
more notoriously illustrated than by The Guardians pet leftist, Steve
Bell, the cartoonist who got his spurs satirising P.M. Major’s Tory years. The
traditionally right wing press did support the protestors- the Daily Mail,
Daily Express, Daily Telegraph., The Times, and Sun after having
slammed the French actions of the previous week as typical gallic excesses well
in need of another Waterloo-style trouncing, actions which were later the
inspiration for what happened here.. There was a lot of typical opportunism here
though because they got decidedly more nervous in their support of their
"this England" interpretation of the rebellion once events
threatened to get out of hand. And by November, all the official right-wingers
(newspapers, the Tory Party, etc.) were completely down on the direct action.
Scared by the potential power of inspiration that the blockaders could have
sparked off, they all rushed in to emphasise that things could only be changed
by the ballot box.
Behind the rubbishing though there was an old familiar theme
in English society: people who work with their hands are among the lowest of the
low only doing such jobs because they don’t possess the intelligence to do any
other. It’s not an attitude so common in France. America or Germany. Here, it’s
still a marker of the incredible class prejudice and rigid division of labour
which remains: even if you’ve managed to make enough dosh to purchase your own
rig and climbed up the scale a bit to the status of "small
businessman" you’re still nothing but a "counter
jumper". Big deal!
If one can say one thing about the last 10 years of effective
social peace (with strikes in 1998 the lowest since records began, even lower
than 1995, also the lowest, up till then, since records began) it is that there’s
been a vast intensification of ignorance and indifference amongst the working
class and the poor about how miserable and precarious are the lives of those
outside of their immediate ever narrowing circle. At the height of the
information revolution people have never been so uninformed: they can answer
endless questions in pub quizzes but know nothing of their neighbours. Hence all
the rubbishing propaganda about rich lorry drivers and farmers (sure, there are
some, but then 20% of Jews in Weimar Germany were rich) falls on receptive ears,
whereas during the Winter of Discontent, the stigmatisation of strikers as ‘greedy’
largely fell on deaf ears. At that time, workers recognised their individual
self-interest as inseparable from their collective class interest, and those who
condemned them in the name of ‘society’ were generally the most narrowly
individualistic. Nowadays the victory of this upside down world makes many of
the poor think that their self-interest is diametrically opposed to their
self-organised class interest, resentful of those who try to overturn this
topsy-turvy perception. A good example of this lack of interest, in all senses
of the word, was the increasing ignorance, aided by 60 days of non-stop
propaganda, about the lives of truckers and farmers. Truckers became reduced to their
stereotype: indifferent killers of cyclists and pedestrians; farmers got reduced
to their stereotype: greedy GMO-planting, BSE-nurturing money-mad
Gypsy-killers. But as with all stereotypes, they are representative of
only a minority, though every farmer and trucker gets tarred with the same
brush.
However, let’s stand back and look at a few hard - very
hard - facts. The enormous defeat of the working class here and crucially
the destruction of the miners in ‘84/’85 among the bitter and often violent
disputes of the 80’s, including urban insurrections, was to have a huge
international ramification. Monetarism in its Thatcherite version became the
model for capitalist development worldwide. The success in defeating working
class resistance and the roll-back of the Welfare State and all other partial
gains of the working class that went with this defeat was exported to East
Europe (remember how Thatcher was feted and cheered in Poland, despite the fact
that it was the so-called communist - Jaruzelski who had supplied Britain with
extra coal during the miners strike?). Despite the naïve yet joyful hopes of
the destroyers of the Berlin Wall, rapacious de-statification of the Russian and
East European economies by a rip-off, free market gangsterism rushed over the
ruined border. In this country, it meant the State with it’s now gung-ho
economic neo-liberalism was viciously out to punish everybody (famously
described by the butcher Thatcher as "the enemy within‘) who’d
dared question it. Appropriate terms were used ("dinosaur" etc.)
to describe those who didn’t embrace this new shift in capital. Except that
dinosaurs may prove to have more longevity if there isn’t a social revolution,
now that capital, for the sake of profit. is quite prepared to set fire to and
drown the planet both at the same time.
With the asset stripping destruction of a lot of
factory-based production, aided and abetted by financial concerns in a
triumphalist City of London, side by side with the tendency towards hollowed-out
companies in building, engineering and what have you and who no longer had many
permanent workers on their pay roll, many laid-off workers were FORCED (more or
less) to become self-employed; to acquire the services of an accountant, to buy
their own fixed capital (trucks, small workshop and what have you). Well, it was
either that or welfare and the prospect of constant harassment and punishment
disguised as ridiculous pseudo-job training or slightly more lenient forms of
workfare than experienced in America. It was basically Hobson‘s Choice. This
mini-mass of intentionally pseudo-individualised people became a veritable army
of "reluctant entrepeneurs" as we began to call them. It marked
the petit-bourgeoisification of the proletariat. Or so it
seemed........................
It equally marked the proletarianisation of the petit
bourgeoisie. A lot of those who were forced into this position weren’t that
enamoured of it from the word go and actually quite fearful of the step. They
had reason to be. They often had to work a lot harder, were "on
call" with a mobile ringing day and night, worried into sleeplessness
over insurance liabilities and costs if anything happened which previously their
employers would have assumed responsibility for. Weekends spent on learning and
doing maintenance to your machinery because you didn’t want to spend the cash
on getting it serviced by a company or by another worker like yourself etc.
Then, no sick pay, no holiday pay and no perks like staying at a hotel when
engaged in "out" work - expenses which you once could have
fiddled. Though you’d get more money (and often, over short periods, a
lot more) if things went well, at other times you were up shit creek without a
paddle and with debts mounting up. on the brink of a nervous breakdown. At best,
the lack of any real life you might have once hoped for has become sublimated
– for example, in endless package holidays and the aestheticisation of
domesticity. Everywhere people are imploding into obsessions with gardening,
cooking, interior decorating, computers, a kind of valorisation of an
introverted narrow life and not much compensation for the overwhelming sense of
absence.
We have an engineering friend who was employed by an American
multinational. The company with one hand gave him the sack and with the other
offered him bits ‘n’ bobs of their own, long term, contract work. It suited
them particularly as regards reduced insurance liability if anything happened
subsequently (e.g. machinery breaking down after servicing etc.). For them, it
probably meant a little more for shareholder dividends in terms of a hike in the
profit margins. Our good and decent friend had always gone on about "the
workers" in a somewhat hilarious demagogic way - bashing his fist on
pub tables when a bit drunk etc., so, as a joke, we’d wind him up, saying,"…businessman
now, eh?". He’d go ape-shit, bashing his fist down even harder on the
table retorting, "I’m still a fucking worker!"
Another instance, and probably more to the point: in the
1980s we once worked on a building site in London where a fair proportion of the
guys were hill farmers from Wales. They were good at their trades, having learnt
them mostly out of necessity in everyday maintenance of their small holdings.
Things like carpentry, roofing and bricklaying. Inevitably, we got talking as
you do during moments, lunch and tea breaks, etc.. A fair amount of the
conversation was about their farms, the long hours, starting before daybreak and
finishing well after dark - often working during the night - for very little
hard cash. In the end they said they liked the outdoor life and the hills but if
they didn’t periodically work on the buildings in London over winter, they
just wouldn’t survive. Their wives and sons looked after their spreads while
they were away. They chatted away openly and pleasantly and weren’t at all
uptight. Well, apart from the foreman but then that’s a foreman for you. The
subcontractor was also a hill farmer but somewhat better off than the others and
though he was making money out of all of us, there was a point of overlapping
friendliness between him and the others from the hills. In fact you got the
impression the subby was a wily guy who was creaming it and he’d go
bright red with pleasure-cum-guilt if he’d particularly done a nice fleecing
job on you ~ rather like he did, but more mechanically, shearing his sheep back
home. He even told all of us that if we got the job finished on time we’d all
get long free visits to a prostitute. Somehow, like the rest of his fancy
incentives, we’d all gawp at it as it never materialised! We’d have been too
embarrassed anyway. A few years later and suddenly we saw some of these hill
farmers on TV. The sub-contractor, chameleon-like, had turned rebel-leader for
the moment and had organised a protest against a visiting Tory Minister of
Agriculture and had been accused of splattering him with eggs.
In the blockades there was something of all of this in the
mix of people involved but with the addition that some were rich
reasonably-sized business people, though the really big trucker firms like the
Eddie Stobarts’, it seemed, didn’t get involved. It was a liquorice
allsorts, a rag tag army, a Pandora’s box of expectation defying accurate
description. True, some had been strike-breaking truckers as the TUC said itself
hiding behind its own, far worse, brutal strike-breaking history and intent.
Equally, some had been involved in "The Winter of Discontent" and
some, with the closure of the pits, were ex-miners, heirs of that great aborted
insurrection. And it’s probably because it was such a mix with an undefined,
though clearly palpable,"worker" element that truckers on the
outside were able to make friendly and instant contact with tanker drivers on
the inside of the depot - many of whom also weren’t employed directly by the
oil companies either! Much ideologically was made at the time (in the TV and
press) that the drivers "trapped" inside the refineries were
union and those on the outside were non-union trying to create a calculated
separation which just couldn’t hold water. Thus T&G representatives were
shown hard at work persuading drivers to get the oil supplies moving to the
garage forecourts spurred on by T&G boss Bill Morris at the annual TUC
conference venomously condemning the protestors mouthing on about "anarchy
cannot rule" etc. *
__________________________________
* Some anarchists - the Anarchist
Federation, producers of that hot-bed of subversion, Organise!, wrote
to that equal hot bed of subversion, The Observer, giving a little boost
to this line of nonsense, crudely distancing themselves from the ugly truckers,
thereby upholding the fine history of anarchism (not). Obviously these
anarchists would object to the paid-up bureaucratic role of bill Morris and the
TUC, but in both viewing the protests as reactionary there wasn't much
difference between them. Despite a supposed critique of anti-fascism, they end
up with aspects of the same facile anti-fascist ideology as The Guardian.
when will these starvelings arise from their slumbers?
__________________________________
For a brief moment something else started to unfold.
Possibly, some T&G aide or subscriptions officer tapped Bill Morris on the
shoulder and said something like: "Hey man, cool it, some of these
truckers in the blockades are union members. Remember, they use our legal
services because the New Labour government abolished legal aid for salaried
people plus other basic shit. I mean hell, you wanted to modernise the TU
movement and now we‘ye got no choice but to go a long with that. ~ and
incidentally, we don‘t want to lose any more members just when
membership is on an upturn because where‘d our secure salaries be if we
fucked our members out. I mean, hell, we ‘re not fat cats but shit it would
he nice to he one ". Sure, they would not have talked "American"
like this but this is the American executive style they would like to
imitate having nothing in common with the workaday world of the American worker.
Suddenly their bad mouthing, along with more enlightened members of the Labour
Government, became more subdued e.g. Minister of Transport, ex-Trot, Gus ("Lord’)
MacDonald and some of these protestors acquired first names, to give them a
more accessible image.
Though this was the first international strike across Europe,
it was also a revolt by a threatened farming community against globalisation in
agriculture. Farming now has moved on from simple agri-business to vast ranching
administered by agronomists, seed and fertilizer specialists with close links to
powerful bio-tech multinationals like Monsanto and owned by huge financial
bodies mainly ensconced in the City of London and Wall Street. Make no mistake
about it these ranches are well in the wings in these islands. These vast
ranches world wide will inevitably compete with each other and one thing is for
certain, it’s the final curtain-call for the folkloric frontier farmer of
Hollywood mythology. For many ecos, though, peasants in India burning GM
conditioned rape seed are OK but small farmers from the south west of England
using the issue of fuel on which to hang their many grievances are merely
reactionary little Englanders or some other charming description.
Despite the "Little Englander" caricature, this
movement was clearly international, with international significance. Inspired
firstly by the success of the French fishermen and then the French lorry
drivers, it then went on to inspire lorry drivers and others in Poland, Hungary,
Israel, Peru and Australia, not to mention several West European countries. It
was also international in other respects. For instance, the situation of the
tanker drivers inside the Stanlow oil refinery should be seen within a global
perspective. In comparison to the truck drivers strike of 20 years ago during
the Winter of Discontent, it was relatively local. Yet the contradiction became
apparent at Stanlow when it was "discovered" that the company
responsible in the last resort for getting the oil out was based….in Milan!
The system of sub-contracting was such that it seems it came as a surprise to
most drivers. It also made a mockery of the laws against sympathy strikes in the
sense of workers belonging to a company taking sympathy action in solidarity
with workers belonging to a related company. The pattern of ownership has become
so bewilderingly opaque that what counted for more than belonging to a
particular trade or branch of industry, financial concern etc was the sheer
sense of frustration, lack of accountability and alienation and torrent of
incomprehension and meaninglessness that threatened finally to overwhelm and
transcend the sectional, confused and contradictory nature of the original
dispute to really drive it to inspirational heights.
Perhaps the most inspiring aspect of the blockade (on the
streets though, people actually referred to it as a "strike")
were the growing permanent roadside meetings and encampments which developed
around the refineries. Although assembly is perhaps too strong a term, they
nevertheless daily grew in number in many parts of the country as people joined
them from all walks of life. People who were simply fed up to their back teeth
and wanted to see something happen.
This was especially true of Stanlow, south of Liverpool in
Cheshire, and Grangemouth on the west coast of Scotland. It was at first a
trickle of people which got bigger daily and could possibly have become a flood
if the blockade hadn’t been called off so quickly. Families turned up (the
kids enjoyed larking about), taxi drivers, builders, women kiosk caterers,
unemployed people, the odd toff and business person as well as those welcome but
nutty eccentrics you always get on such occasions. Most importantly - once at
the roadside assemblies - no matter what - anybody who was there, regardless of
status, job or gender - was given the right to vote on immediate practical
proposals like should tankers be let out for essential deliveries to such and
such a place, should we contact so and so, should we ask for blankets, should we
stay, should we ignore police directives etc? A magician at Stanlow, between odd
bouts of entertaining the assembly with his tricks, was also occasionally
putting up three to five hands when voting.
In many ways this was the most remarkable aspect of the
strike-cum-blockade. This type of ultra-egalitarian, direct democracy hadn’t
taken place in these islands for a long, long time and probably before trade
unionism existed in what can loosely be called "an industrial
dispute". Perhaps the last time was in the late 18th century? Who the
hell knows? And does it matter? Although, during "The Winter of
Discontent" there were lorry driver blockades, if you weren’t a
transport union member you wouldn’t have been allowed to vote in the ad hoc
roadside meetings. Thus, the city of Hull in East Yorkshire in the winter of ’79
- ’80 was effectively blockaded by striking lorry drivers who decided
themselves what provisions/services etc could or couldn’t enter the city. It
was terrific. It was memorable. But would these truckers have allowed anybody to
turn up and have a say in their decision-making if they didn’t have a T&G
union card? Even though this was rank ‘n’ file unionism at its best,
potentially pointing to the transcendence of the union form, would these
drivers, in the inspirational cold of that snow-bound winter and which now seems
so long ago, have made such an imaginative though necessary leap?
It was precisely this ultra-open, assembly form that looked
as though it was beginning to get out of hand — and very quickly. And there’s
the rub. There was nonetheless a contradiction between the hauliers/farmers
and the meeting itself: finally hauliers and farmers, because they had rightly
acquired such prestige through an authority based on audacity, were able to call
off the protest and without a great deal of fuss. Their authority was beginning
to hamper the flow of that drift they had themselves set in motion. Basically,
they’d got scared of their own power and recoiled before their strength.
Possibly they saw how small in number they were — 2 to 3 thousand actual
truckers and farmers at most — yet their success had begun to throw up in days
a situation of dual power which was hovering dimly on the horizon. Who wouldn’t
be scared by such responsibility? They would have had to go beyond their de
facto vanguard position and connect directly with other workers in
order to inspire some practical activity from the vast majority of people who,
up till then, were merely passively supporting them. They perhaps could
feel these meetings/assemblies, particularly the big ones, were beginning to
take on a rhythm of their own: the hot heads (from where ~ who knows and who
cares?) were beginning to let fly with their tongues. One of the official
organisers said on the telly that they'd called off the blockades because they
were scared that people were getting angrier. Probably they wanted to achieve a
role as negotiators by showing the authorities that they had the power to turn
the people in the forecourts on and off like a tap. They capitulated and how1 At
one stroke they exposed their own naivity and lock of experience using all the
old, time-honoured, foolish arguments about moral high grounds, good will via a
placebo "breathing space" of 60 days etc. They snatched defeat
from the jaws of victory. Even the most wooden of trade union strike proceedings
wouldn't have left it like that. No agreement, no piece of paper with some
signature, no nothing! It's the one thing you can't do when faced with a
blood-thirsty UK state especially when it concerns outright protest and direct
action from below. The Dracula State here with its fangs still dripping with the
life blood of miners, printers, seafarers, dockers, urban rioters and anybody
else who simply wanted to be really different and authentic, simply isn't going
to recognise goodwill. All it recognises and suppers on is WEAKNESS.
Interregnums merely give it time to go for the kill. Many an old lag from the
old battles shook their head in disbelief. Hadn't some of the protesters said
during the blockade that they now realised something of what the miners had been
through in '84/'85 and from such unlikely quarters as Essex truckers? Sure
enough, apart from a few soothing, mealy-mouthed words, the only the State is
actively doing is making certain, with the assistance of the Confederation of
British Industry, Police Chiefs, the Media and the TUC, is that no such event
must ever take place again, even if it means destroying the livelihood of every
rebel trucker and small farmer. And if there's a repeat of the blockades
they'll do that through the way they know: fines, expropriations and debts
rather than jail and martyrdom. That's the modern way: the way of money.
The 60 day truce gave the authorities plenty of time to get themselves into
gear, both in terms of law and order and in terms of crapaganda. Whilst in
September the ruling world were divided - basically between the left and right
wings of capital - after 60 days they were much more united. Why? Because they
know that any concession to direct democracy undermines bourgeois democracy, any
concession to one section of the poor would incite opposition in all sections. A
Thatcherite journalist in The Times put the predicament of the ruling class most
clearly: "This crisis could be a truly historic event. This could be the
moment when Britain forgets all the hard lessons it learnt under Margaret
Thatcher about economic realism, market incentives and social rigour and drifts
back into the delusion and self-indulgence of the 1960s and 1070s. This could be
the moment when the British public decides...that they can casually ignore
the laws of economics...that the self-discipline created by the economic
insecurity of the 1980s can finally be thrown away like an unfashionable
frock...After the Second world war the western world enjoyed more than two
decades of full employment before the lessons of the 1930s were forgotten in the
breakdown of social discipline that began in 1968. Is Britain about to
forget the lessons of the 1980s before full employment has even been
restored?"(14/9/00). At the time one felt that the small farmers and
small hauliers recoiled before the enormity of what had been unleashed - a hunch
that was subsequently confirmed by Channel 4 TV. At the last moment it foundered
through fear of its own potential and the promise to return within 60 days
proved to be an empty threat, which government spies on the ground would surely
have been aware of. So Eddie Grundy retired to Ambridge to nurse his hunting gun
which more than likely be used to blow his brains out than shoot rabbit. And
Ernie, driver of "the fastest milk cart in the west" country,
decided to call it a day in more ways than one.
The November protests were pretty much a damp squib, hardly
surprising in retrospect. The best one can say about the suggestion of a
Jarrow-type slow parade of cars up and down the country is that it undermined a
little the crass stereotyping of the blockaders as "petite-bourgeois
Tories". Such a traditional Old Labour-type image of "fine decent
upstanding people" somehow clashed with the Tory definition of "fine
decent upstanding people". However, the original Jarrow March was an
expression of appalling weakness - 10 years after the defeat of the General
Strike in 1926 as much at the combined hands of the TUC and the Tory Party as
the November parade was (in 1926 the TUC initially supported the strike in order
to rein it in and undermine it; today, with a Labour Government, the Tories have
swapped roles with the TUC). The would-be workers of Jarrow marched partly
because they ate better and had a more cheerful time on the march than stuck in
an 80% unemployed town with the modern equivalent of £27 a week. Despite much
support, the Prime Minister at the time - Stanley Baldwin - dismissed them out
of hand and refused to meet them, surprise, surprise. In 1981 the TUC tried to
imitate this with the Peoples March for Jobs. This time, of course, there was
much media coverage: cameras were waiting to record the moment the march passed
through the village of Lavendon in Bucks, sight of the most well-known photo of
the Jarrow march. In '81 no-one complained of the sacreligious nature of the
show or of the fact that the kids of '81 unemployed weren't running about
barefoot, though today Old Labourites are all jumping up and down with their
mock outrage. In '81 four weeks after the TUC's boring march of those willing to
be hierarchically organised, the self-organised unemployed (and many
employed also) resorted to rioting in the streets, with over 30 cities erupting
against the cops and the Economy. During those 10 days that shook the State,
Thatcher herself admitted to hardly sleeping a wink as she tossed (but refused
to turn) around ideas on the maintenance of Britain's brutal class society. From
1936 to 1981 to 2000, history repeats itself, first time as tragedy, second time
as a B-movie stunt, third time history virtually got arrested before it even got
onto the motorway. The protestors, threatened with the loss of their livelihood
and unable and unwilling to extend their protest didn't even try to reclaim the
streets on foot, but were forced to walk along the pavement by the cops. Though
it's certainly not that lorries and cars are necessarily signs of wealth or lack
of poverty, as shallow well-off leftists would have us believe, they are
commodities whose effect is to isolate and separate us. CB radios and mobiles
apart, in November the drivers never got to really meet new people in
this fizzled out parade. This possibility - the chance of breaking out of
habitual contact networks, of taking over the alien territory of this society
and making it ours, is the possibility thrown up of all social
movements. But subverting the normal commodity use of lorries and cars means, at
some point, getting out of your lorries and cars. Unfortunately the various
leaders of the protests had their way, and boring self-defeating, and ultimately
irrational, "reasonableness" took hold, despite the "nothing to
lose!" rhetoric ~ people clapped the demagogic phoney sympathizers, leaders
held negotiations with politicians and talked to the TV cameras - anything for
the 15 minutes of fame this society dangles carrot-like, all the better to beat
you with the stick of financial ruin.
One of those politely clapped
was Mark Francis of the Peoples Fuel Lobby, a mini-celebrity who'd already
appeared on Newsnight and Kilroy. On November 10th The Guardian quoted
him as saying, "Everybody has jumped up and down and have said this fuel
price has put us out of business - that's bullshit. The deep-rooted problem is
over-population (in the British haulage industry). There are too many wagons on
the road". Such a blatant desire to collaborate in the restructuring of the
haulage industry should have, at the very least, got him booed, but perhaps few
truckers read The Guardian, hardly surprising considering how
their pernicious portrayal of the protesters as fascists seems to have colonised
the brains of people who should know better.
Gordon Brown has already started on
this road to restructuration in his November budget, by upping the start-up
licence for those entering the haulage industry from £6000 to £20,000. when
one then considers that involvement in any go-slow or blockade could result in
having your licence withdrawn it doesn't take much to how truckers' minds may be
concentrated.
* Some anarchists - the Anarchist
Federation, producers of that hot-bed of subversion, Organise!, wrote
to that equal hot bed of subversion, The Observer, giving a little boost
to this line of nonsense, crudely distancing themselves from the ugly truckers,
thereby upholding the fine history of anarchism (not). Obviously these
anarchists would object to the paid-up bureaucratic role of bill Morris and the
TUC, but in both viewing the protests as reactionary there wasn't much
difference between them. Despite a supposed critique of anti-fascism, they end
up with aspects of the same facile anti-fascist ideology as The Guardian.
when will these starvelings arise from their slumbers?
***************************************************
Country and Western
capital
Sometime after the calling off of the September blockade, the Chancellor of the
Exchequer, "Capability" Brown(1) went on TV to stress that British
agriculture was undergoing a "restructuring". he avoided using
the term crisis to play down the dramatic events taking place down on the farm.
The gradual withdrawal of subsidy in terms of food price support has meant that
the reform of CAP (Common Market agricultural Policy) has caused many small
farmers to place their worsening plight alongside the resistance of miners and
steelworkers in the early 1980s. Unfortunately, this seismic shift in
consciousness in parts of the countryside is hobbled by arcane political
stereotypes which persists in viewing the major divisions in society as summed
up and represented by the opposition between Labour and Tory party. A North
Wales beef and sheep farmer, Brian Perry expressed it in the following way:
"We weren't there for the miners or the steelworkers. The farmers were
Conservative and the miners were Labour. we know how they felt". The
Guardian, Oct 21st 200. However, neither the Labour party nor the trades
Unions were there for the miners during their mighty year-long strike, just as
in a similar manner, the NFU (National farmers Union), the Road Hauliers
Association and the Tory party weren't there for this practically spontaneous
movement. (Demonstrating farmers later complained in the pages of Farming
Today that this was not a harvest festival of resistance because unlike the
French protest they had not gathered in the corn prior to taking to the
streets). they were effectively disowned by all and sundry official bodies -
which actually could have given them a head start, but the greatest weakness
then became a lack of resolve and their own creation of new media-pampered
leaders.
_____________________________________
(1) The original
"Capability" Brown was an 18th century landscape designer whose great
contribution to the countryside was to reinforce enclosures by kicking the
peasants off the land and chopping down woods to create lifeless but
neatly-hedged vistas, complete with fake sheep that never moved, bleated or
shat, a still-life aestheticisation of dehumanised unnatural nature, aiming to
soothe the frayed sensibilities of the aristocrats he landscaped for on the eve
of the Industrial Revolution. Over 200 years later, our modern
"Capability" Brown (no, not Alan Titchmarsh) wants to create a similar
graveyard for his multi-national superiors, a graveyard strewn with the bodies
of poor farmers with self-inflicted bullet holes through their heads.
______________________________________
There is much talk of an agricultural crisis but the pity was the protesting
farmers did not ever really clarify the situation when they could have easily
done so. It seemed they wished to hang onto a comforting corporatism, far more
applicable to 30 years ago, of tractors, farmyards, cow biers, pig pens, geese
and the inevitable sheep dog. The reality is vastly different and
set to change even more rapidly - and hinted in Brown's favoured term "restructuring",
which was also applied to the steel industry in the late 70s and 89s and
especially to the mining industry. Behind it in The fields (more like prairies)
lies merger after merger (the taking over of one farm after another) by City
institutions which lease the land to contract farming companies which employ
professional agronomists to run these new corporate outfits. The City
institutions are then the shareholder and contract farming companies the
decision makers who decide what to plant or rear. All round there is a huge
increase in contract working.
This
restructuring aims at the creation of unimaginable vast farms, which will
eventually come to dominate world agriculture and which will be run by the City
of London, Wall St and other major stock exchanges. At this point in time
globalised farming is also the stock exchange-isation of agriculture.
Canny country talk is no longer the witless comedy of "How much a good yoke
of bullocks at Stamford Fair" as in Shakespeare's Henry 1Vth but
about the rising middle classes of India and China etc and growth in the per
capita consumption requiring an increase in grain and meat production. That this
agriculture of immense dimensions is closely linked to the petrochemical
industry and bio-engineering companies should surprise no one. Sadly, it is the
small farmers that are doing all the dirty work for the GM food trials. As food
subsidies diminish they are increasingly tempted by a bung from Montsanto etc to
compensate for the sharp reduction in the giro cheques from Brussels. but these
are just short term bribes to pacify small farmers to what they face in the
slightly longer term. They will be surplus to (capitalist) requirements: as a
government spokesman said on a radio debate on 3rd January 2001, "The vast
majority of them will be out of business.
On account of the unpopularity of the CAP (e.g. the Geldof/Thatcher
pseudo-confrontation over the refusal to liberate the food mountains for famine
victims in East Africa) the spin applied to the reform of the CAP suggests the
withdrawal of ALL subsidies. Nothing could have been further from the
truth. In fact, price support has been replaced by area payments. One doesn't
have to be a mathematical genius to realise that a "farm" going on for
the size of a small county will get more than those glorified meadows and a bit
more such as dot the Pennines, Mendips and the Welsh mountains. In 1994 (please
note, not 1999/2000) it is thought a dozen farmers (i.e. management boards)
banked cheques worth £1 billion while it was rumoured four received more than
£5 million each. In the bad old days of CAP at least the food surplus and waste
were there for all to see and bemoan. This is far more sinister and occult and
more akin to the unseen millions beamed around the world everyday through
cyberspace.
The
blockade was a lost opportunity for the farmers themselves to clear up the
confusion clinging to the term crisis and to lay bare the actual class relations
in the countryside. Had they done so, perhaps along the lines indicated above,
their impact would have been greater. To the sheer elemental force of the
movement which is so typical of this country (e.g. the miners' strike, the
Winter of Discontent, the class riots of 1981, the Poll Tax revolt) there would
have been indeed a critique making force yet more irresistible through the
clarity of analysis. That they did not do so (and the hill farmers of Wales and
elsewhere must know better than anyone else how dire the direction of modern
farming is) suggests the movement harboured a great weakness destined from the
start to hand back power to the enemy. Wishing to call a halt to the rapid
changes taking place in agriculture and in their traditional allegiances (and
meanwhile establishing common ground with the hordes of redundant steel workers,
miners and what have you) the farmers ("remnant farmers" rather than
"tenant farmers") should pause to remember what Saint Juste said, who
was himself riding the wave of a peasants uprising: "Those who make half a
revolution dig naught but their own grave".
**************************************************************************
 |

|
Rainin’ in my
Heart
As the autumn floods drowned parts of the country, one of the
more nauseating aspects of the sad November protest was the sight of banner
waving eco-purists lining the route of the motorway, wagging their fingers as
only the Politically Correct English Middle Class can. Their moralism meant that
they could feel good about point blank refusing to talk to people, scurrying off
to the protection of their familiar clique whenever someone tried to discuss
things with them. No wonder they arrogantly and ignorantly assumed that those
who supported or took part in the fuel protests hadn’t realised the
contradiction of the environmental message. In fact the only message of Friends
of the Earth and of Greenpeace was "Here is the Truth – bow down before
it!". Though it cheered us up that Greenpeace got acquitted for digging up
the GMOs last autumn, in the end it was all a bit of free advertising for them,
rather than the action, which had already been done by loads of other groups of
people. The priestly messenger role teaches only subtle variants of "We’ll
do it for you" or "We’re the One True Path – join us!".
Particularly as Monbiot, Melchett, Porritt and Secrett (that well-known Law
firm) were quick to emphasise "There is Good Direct Action and Bad Direct
Action. We are Good, RTS’s May Day and the fuel protests are Bad". The
corny condemnations of violence and intimidation as undemocratic means that they’re
hoping one day to be very vicious democratic Ministers of the Environment, when
they can be really intimidating and violent, all in the name of
"Saving the planet".
State "ecologists" (who pretend that capitalism,
the market and the State, could be environmentally-friendly) always condemn
independent movements because they undermine their would-be authority and they
want to show how useful they are for certain sections of capital. The
contradiction of State "ecologists" was best expressed by the Green
Party in France. They’re well-known for condemning Jospin for conceding
victory to the fishermen there in their struggle for less tax on their fuel,
stating the standard eco-ideological line about the genuinely devastating effect
on the environment, yet for months they’d been supporting Nuclear Power,
despite having condemned it before they joined the government. What a surprise!
Does it really need repeating – the critique of the sick joke of democracy,
the critique of our ‘right’ to decide between Tweedledum or Tweedlegreen for
a minute every 4 or 5 years, our predictable cynicism about the fact that, when
elected, they just go on doing what’s good for their class, regardless of
their meager promises? The French Greens support pollution by the powerful (the
nuclear power lobby), but not by the poor. For this reason, a 2000 strong demo
against a nuclear reactor in the North of France physically prevented rank and
file Green Party activists from joining the demo. If you join the State you
cannot be ecological.
People who need to use vehicles, despite recognising
their miserable effects (and not just on the ozone layer), in order to survive
will hardly reduce their use because of higher indirect taxes on fuel. This is a
lie indirectly admitted by Blair & co. when they say that if they reduce
fuel tax there’ll be less money for the NHS and pensioners (this, after having
ruled out increased income and corporation taxes for the rich). But if less of
the so-called "Green" tax means more petrol will be bought, then logic
states that revenue should be constant. And if increased tax means less car
users then how can that help the NHS? But as always with arguments which accept
the contradictions of this society, logic has fuck-all to do with it. In this
case, high indirect taxes are just another way of making the poor pay for the
insane crisis capitalism has thrown the world into, the ideology being that we
are all responsible for this disaster. And the option of lower indirect
tax is presented as a threat to poor pensioners. As always, the hidden logic
behind this lack of logic is the need for the ruling class to divide the poor
against each other. No wonder Two-Jags Prescott (whose petrol consumption is
paid for by that strange beast, the taxpayer) advocates the "Green"
tax. Many of the hauliers’ spokesmen have advocated higher tax for the top tax
band, which kind of undermines the caricaturisation of them as Tories and
certainly puts them to the Left of the government.
Rachel, a woman truck driver involved in the blockades, put
the tax question more clearly: "[Dcl we have to pay high levels of vat on
diesel and petrol in order to have decent social services?.. .1 am now 60 years
old. I drive a 41 tome truck over 4000 kilometres a week, to Spain and Portugal
and back as an employed driver, for which I get between £300 & £350 a week
clear paid into my bank account. The fact that I face a future with an
inadequate pension and am terrified of becoming ill in case I have to rely on
our NHS has nothing, repeat nothing.. .to
do with not paying enough tax. If you concede the ground on
which you argue to Capitalists there there is indeed no hope of achieving a
socialist society. The enemy is Capitalism, not low taxation.*
It’s significant that Blair only showed concern for pensioners after the fuel
blockades had started: in ‘98 a handful of pensioners successfully blockaded
the Humber Bridge for a few hours. Blair’s attempts to divide pensioners off
from blockaders is aimed at ensuring pensioners fail to recognise themselves in
the actions of the fuel protesters.
Scientists have admitted that globally a 60% reduction in C02
emissions is the minimum needed over the next 10 years, whilst the various
governments are humming and haahing over a 5% reduction. Predictably, the
government complained, in November, about the loss to the economy of a billion
quid, whilst global warming cost well over that in two weeks of flooding last
autumn alone. It’s clear that whilst the need for a quick turnover of profit
continues, the smooth running of which is the function of the State, the State’s
self-proclaimed long-term project of clearing up the environment is just an
abstract pretension subverted by the irrational reality of a competitive market
economy. At ‘best’, whilst the economy exists, an ecological State would
need to be world-wide and so totalitarian as to make previous forms of
dictatorship seem like a light slap on the wrist in comparison. Whilst the need
for profit exists, any infringement of a hierarchically organised
ecological policy would need unprecedented forms of surveillance and policing
(particularly in those parts of the world where people are forced, through
poverty, to destroy parts of the land, over-fish, etc., just in order to stay
alive). The only real choice is to abolish the profit motive and the need for
money. How? - by the masses of individuals seizing and transforming the whole of
social space and goods in order to make the world based on human beings not
commodities. Though this project seemed like a far greater possibility in the
60s up until the mid-80s, the irony is that the greater the urgency of such a
project, the more unrealistic it seems.
The fuel blockades’ limits were partly defined by their
attachments to old methods: negotiations, leadership, public opinion, etc.-
symptoms of a lack of confidence brought upon by 10 years of hardly contested
counter-revolution. But they also gave us a glimpse of possibilities – the
subversion of the economy had its freshness and egalitarianism, and expressed
the spontaneity of new forms and attitudes that need to re-emerge from an
informed reflection on the reasons for the eclipse of the old movements.
This text was produced care of:
B.M.Combustion, London, WC1N 3XX
****************************************************************************************
APPENDIX 1
We produced the following leaflet for the November 14th
demo:
FUEL FOR THOUGHT
Pouring petrol on troubled waters
One of the best results of the fuel blockades was the fact
that one began to talk to virtual strangers about what was going on ~ an
experience not known since Poll Tax. And you began to talk about everything that
mattered — poverty, the
environment, the futureless society we live in, the sense of defeat over the
years, the miners strike, the Winter of Discontent, sex ( well,
not the latter but next time maybe). Suddenly a breath of fresh air: at long
last, the rulers’ smug smirks wiped off their smarmy faces; after a decade of
virtually unopposed intensified State/market misery, a decade that seemed like a
century, something that gave us some sense of life and hope. And it was a breath
of fresh air quite literally: the streets of Manchester eerily empty apart from
buses. London like a permanent Sunday. If this was an anti-eco protest, as some
would have it, it wasn’t turning out like that
This is a pedestrian leaflet
in that we’re part of
that large body of people who broadly supported the protest and always, it
seems, waiting at bus stops! We know very little about farmers and truckers
apart from occasional pub conversations. Obviously the protagonists are
understandably war of this "outsider invasion, suspicious of hidden
agendas. Maybe you see us as outside agitators but really we’re agitated
outsiders, like 99% of those who gave their support. In a life divided between
insiders and outsiders, everything now really is INSIDE OUT!
At the same time as thoroughly enjoying the protest from a
distance we felt there were contradictory aspects to it. It seems about 20% of
those on the blockades were "rich" bosses and that wasn’t
confronted. We fully realise that the rest were technically small-business
people and self-employed forced by changing economic circumstances to often
become "reluctant entrepeneurs", usually debt-driven, worried
sick about bank overdrafts etc and many of them not exploiting others’ labour.
It’s complex and dismissing the struggle as "petit bourgeois" etc.
is just simplistic, dogmatic, intellectual purism, far more arrogantly and
safely conservative than the blockaders.
Certainly we loved the short-lived forums that gathered
spontaneously around the oil refineries. We liked the general lack of placards
and we liked the voting procedures that unfolded at Grangemouth and Stanlow etc.
No matter who or what you were if you’d taken the trouble to turn up at the
roadside you could vote. But was this an open forum or merely a smart bit of
public relations for the TV merely ratifying things that didn’t really need
ratifying? It seemed that more and more people flocked to these forums daily
getting ever bigger. We don’t know if this was one of the reasons why the
protest was suddenly called-off as those people who’d unfortunately allowed
themselves to become leaders got panicked by what they’d set in motion,
quickly arranging a behind the scenes settlement with police and others? Things
were certainly poised for a greater take-off and practical involvement of a lot
of others in their workplaces. It was obvious that individual contact through
mobiles etc would have had to be made to hospital staff to ensure fuel supplies
did go to the hospitals and not to forecourts on the motorways and that district
nurses and health visitors could have a full tank in their cars. The prospect of
a rudimentary dual power was dimly shaping up and it would have been far
better... GULP! …to take such a giant step than capitulate before your
own might. Moreover, it would have challenged the media/government spin that
truckers and small farmers were destroying the health service.
Instead defeat was snatched from the jaws of victory. The
protestors backed off declaring a 60 day moratorium without securing one simple
guarantee about anything. Dead duck arguments — the
moral high ground — public opinion - etc were deployed. The State doesn’t
give a toss about such phrases and "public opinion" is a
media/ad man’s invention which didn’t exist 100 years ago. Public opinion
was behind 300,000 miners and their supporters who marched in London in 1992
over pit closures. Even Tories like Churchill were on their side. It made flick
all difference. Then there was a so-called moratorium but it was merely a ruse
as the closure programme carried on dictatorially anyway.
We realise that the price of fuel
was a pretext for many
small farmers and truckers, having been pushed to the outside margins on the
brink of collapse. Small farmers are now being eliminated as ranches the size of
small counties owned by City of London financiers, administered by agronomists
in league with giant bio-tech companies. are now well on the drawing board.
Basically, together with often smaller hauliers, they’re fighting against
obsolescence ("Capability" Brown’s "restructuring")
and are the latest trade in the firing line after steel workers, miners and
printers. These more traditionally recognised sections of ‘the working
class" did help each other somewhat and the farmers didn’t etc. Well all
that’s true but it’s of no help now (and in the light of changing social conditions we need to redefine what
is" the working class"). Ferocious laws were put in place to
stop the working class cutting up untidy but remember it was the unions who
first of all stopped this getting together before the State enshrined this in
law. So the nasty attack launched against the protestors in September 2000 by
the T&GWU who’d already helped flick over the Liverpool dockers over 3
years ago, shouldn’t have surprised anybody. It was merely the most blatant in
a long line of such attacks. Mind you some of these newly emerged leaders seem
to be acting like TU bureaucrats already.
If this wasn’t bad enough
the liberal press in particular
went in for an horrendous rubbishing on other fronts, epitomised most clearly by
Steve Bell, The Guardians pet cartoonist. They made out the protestors as
fat, ugly, right wing, flag-waving, fascist svmpathising thickos. who couldn’t
care less about the NHS, pensioners or the environment. The latter has been used
especially effectively. For some of the press and TV it’s mainly the
protestors who are responsible for the horrors of global warming. And, lo and
behold, it’s like as though God and Noah went to their immediate
assistance: THE RAIN AND BIG FLOOD FOLLOWED. Yea,
the State is divine! What a spectacular PROPAGANDA coup.
True, there is a vast and frightening ecological catastrophe unfolding but this
is the outcome of a capitalist mode of production entering a suicide phase
prepared to destroy every living thing. Hypocritically attacking the protestors
lets the major accomplices of the State and the huge transnationals off the
hook. All those summits like Kyoto, supposedly convened to cut greenhouse gases,
are meaningless. ineffectual, politically correct, theatrical exercises as they,
the biggest culprits. remorselessly pursue global devastation for a quick buck.
But isn’t it the old, old story in a new guise?
Isn’t it
always those at the bottom of flue pile who get the blame for all the shit and
far deeper in it’? Of course people at the sharp end are going to be uptight
about the price of fuel when they don’t have much dosh to play with but that
doesn’t mean you’re not worried about the on-going ecological nightmare. It’s
just that you feel so impotent to do anything about anything until finally there’s
something that causes you to snap inside. You’ve got to start somewhere but
always remember the State will deploy any argument, no matter how
low, because they don’t want to see any social movement.
Remember that eco arguments
were deployed after the event in
the 90s pit closures. Having defeated the miners in their year long strike in
1984/5, the UK State went to destroy them completely as a warning to others: Don’t
ever dare challenge established authority ever again! Only later was it
suggested that the industry was a big polluter. Even the leftist New
Statesman endorsed this bullshit without underlining the real reason for the
pit closures.
Stereotyping the fuel protestors as
anti-eco is great stuff
coming from a State deploying fast cars, government chartered jets and what have
you. Then there’s "Two Jags" Prescott. All these services for
immediate consumption and all on freebies. (The hypocrisy is inevitable for
those in hierarchical positions: "Do as I say not as I do". "Moreover,
where is this governments green tax going to’? Public transport hasn’t
improved. There’s been no fare reductions nor increased services. In fact with
ongoing privatisation for the benefit of shareholders and fat cats, things have
got worse for all us alley cats.
The problem with all social movements
is to break out of the
particular and make connections. In the mid-90s, Reclaim the Street and
the Liverpool Dockers came together and engaged in direct action against the
dock bosses. How about a street party of fuel protestors and commuters who
suffer the daily stress of expensive and miserable transport? How about
blockading a main line station and holding an open forum there? How about (enter
your owndream action in the space provided: Our wildest dreams are
their greatest nightmares and their delirious dreams are our greatest
nightmares).
We’d like to say more —
and we will later. That’s all
for now folks! ~
Adge Cutler and the Wurzels
(Just
4 people. November 12th. 2000).
(If interested contact: do: BM Combustion. London, WC
lN 3XX. who has kindly let us use his box number).
APPENDIX 2
Sometimes it’s hard to be
a Woman
This was received from Neil Gordon: practicalhistory@hotmail.com,
20/9.2000
This came to me via another discussion about the petrol prices movement in
the UK I’ve been having. Gill and Dave referred to by Rachel had denounced the
movement as ‘petit bourgeois’.
Dear Comrades
»Fuel Blockades
As an international freight driver I find it hard to keep my
cool on this one, we truck drivers at last, all be it in a distorted way, start
to stick together, tanker drivers refuse to cross blockades, Bill Morris and the
TUC Ieaders indulge in a disgraceful sell out (which more than matches Bill
Morris’ sell out of the Liverpool Dockers) and my own "Comrades"
side with Bill Morris!
Just to state where I am coming from: I am a member of at
least one usually excluded group, ie. A woman truck driver in a very male world,
one that is not only occupied by men but one in which racist, homophobic,
sexist, xenophobic comments and attitudes are a constant threat.
Part of the ideological baggage that stems from the attitudes
of many of the blokes I work with is that they are totally cynical about
collective »action, the sell out of the lorry drivers strike in 1979 by union
bureaucrats has taught them a bitter lesson, one that has led to a sense of
defeat and reactionary ideas. In spite of all this, in spite of the fact that
the blockades were organised by small owner drivers and other "nasty"
»elements, we did actually stand together and fight our corner for a
brief period of a week at least. I think socialists like me deserve more support
than we apparently received from David and Gill.
David says that the blockades are about moving in a direction
of "less tax, less welfare" " no, that is not a marxist position,
is David saying that we have to pay high levels of vat on diesel and petrol in
order to have decent social services? If he is then my personal experience is at
odds with his opinion. I am now 60 years old, I drive a 4ltonne truck over 4,000
kilometres a week, to Spain and Portugal and back as an employed driver
for which I get between 300 and 350 a week clear paid into my bank account. The
fact that I face a future with an inadequte pension and am terrified of becoming
ill in case I have to rely on our NHS has nothing, repeat nothing David to do
with not paying enough tax. If you concede the ground on which you argue to
Capitalists then there is indeed no hope of achieving a socialist society. The
enemy is Capitalism, not low taxation.
I am proud to call myself a trucker and prouder still of
being a woman trucker (even if it does get changed to "lady driver"
yuk), fighting my corner in a very male world. It does actually take a lot out
of me too, for example, pull into a truck stop in Spain in the middle of the
night to fill up with diesel and get a meal and get looked at like I come from
another planet. When I talk and discuss with the blokes I have to be very
careful about how I put forward my socialist ideas. Language like Gill and
David, use would increase my sense of vulnerability and I do not want to be
associated with you or the language you use.
The reasons I support the blockade are because lower fuel
prices are a means of protecting my job. I’m now employed but three years ago,
before I went bankrupt, I was an owner driver (I think that there probably are
historical examples of owner drivers, like journeymen who owned their own tools
or their own small businesses,who can legitimately be described as working
class, (at least as much as a University Lecturer can*). When I was
going down the pan, knowing I was failing to compete, knowing I was losing, I
tried to keep afloat by "running on cherry" (using untaxed diesel). I
bought it off a bloke who charged me 18p a litre, he obviously paid less than
this in order to make a profit out of customers like me. I didn’t like what I
was doing and, after » I got caught and fined the £1,500 I had to pay , was
one of the reasons I went bankrupt. I was paying £1,374 a month for the only
new vehicle I will ever own, the tax on it (vehicle excise duty) was about
£3,750 a year (I can‘t remember the exact figure but it’s now about £
5,500 for a two axle unit pulling a tri-axle trailer). If I bought legitimate
diesel the diesel costs were in excess of £3000 a month (insurance, and R &
M use up another £500 pcm). I used to get £1,700 for a Barcelona (and back),
work it out for »yourself .Whether employed or owner drivers we are not all
Eddie Stobarts. In shcrt you have to drive night and day, literally, in order to
make a living.
I will never ever forget that day, about six in the
morning in Ramsgate Docks, when I was busted, this Customs Officer, in a bizarre
ceremony, putting her hand on my beautiful 420Eurostar and saying "in the
name of the Queen I seize this vehicle . There were tears of rage and
humiliation streaming down my cheeks, later on, after I mortgaged my earnings to
pay them, I said to her "look, what can I do now? I have 850 litres of
cherry in my tanks, I will really get wrong with the Green Party if I dump it in
Ramsgate Docks!". "I couldn’t care less what you do with it"
she said, " You’re just shipping out aren’t you? Run on cherry
the other side of the channel all the time for all I care, just don’t have any
in your tanks when you come back". On the ferry I tipped vodka down me and
talked with another trucker who told me about a number of prison sentences he
had served, he instinctively felt solidarity with me "know what you want to
do? Keep running on cherry till you have your £1,500 back from the bastards,
then when you have done that start making more money out of them!" Maybe
that just makes the two of us "lumpen scum" who "turn up on the
picket lines?", I do though know that the hatred we both felt towards those
who had done what they had done to us was a valid emotion which was a starting
point for action.
I am proud to be a trucker but I am also ashamed when I think of drivers
driving through the picket lines, when, possibly these same drivers change
»their attitudes and respect blockades would it not be better to support them
and try to express solidarity? I am told one of the tanker drivers said in a tv
interview that he had driven through miners picket lines and he now
realised he was wrong, what would David and Gill tell him? That he was wrong to
drive through the miners picket lines but that he should have driven through the
"petit-bourgeois" picket lines? What are they going to say to the rest
of us? That because these blockades were led by petit-bourgeois elements then we
should all go home and read at least one volume of "Das Capital"
before demonstrating again?
Because of the cut throat nature of Capitalism the job I do for a living
could be described as a rat race, except that this would be unfair to rats
because rats don’t behave in such an anti-social way as Capitalists, the point
however is to change it, not criticise us when for the first time in years, when
we start to come together and when Bill Morris sells us out and advises drivers
who are starting to respect blockades to drive past them then you could at least
be a little more constructive than to hurl insults at us like "lumpen
scum" and "petit bourgeois narrow interests". By the way Tony
Blair is no Allende.*.If you think he is we have nothing in common
and there’*s no further point in discussion.
Conditions are so bad in our industry that there are blokes (and women)
driving night and day, 24 hours a day, it’s not all that unusual for blokes to
run back from Southern Spain without sleep, a friend does Lancashire-Brindisi
and back with only the sleep he can snatch whilst waiting fcr the ferry or being
loaded or unloaded, this is quite common, as are interrupter switches so you can
turn off the tackograph. Also hidden diesel tanks built where customs officers
don’t find them, so you can run on cherry without getting caught, like I was,
(by the way, the government made it legal to run on cherry last week, during the
crisis) . There is a minority of drivers who use amphetamines and a lot who use
alcohol, but we are not all macho "lumpen scum", I have met with so
many acts of mutual aid and help from blokes who I will possibly never see
again, the point is to turn this into trades union solidarity and to do this we
need insults and negative opinions like we need a hole in the head.
I have to get up in the early hours of the morning and there is a whole lot
more I want to say but I will leave it, I could add that I don’t want to be
personal but this wouldn’t be true. That Volve42O I drive is all there is
between me and having to "live" on an OAP, it’s my life, these
issues are that important to me and I will fight with the blokes (and women) I
work with, you can see some of our opinions if you go into:
»http: //ladytruckersclub.tripod.com/LTC_Bulletin/page1.htm .And look round
the site.
In socialism and in Solidarity with my Sisters and Brothers ,
Rachael Webb.
Top of Page
|