I get the impression that what Powell was banging on about was race, and in my humble opinion he was completely wrong. Raw racism, the belief in the superiority of one race over another, the incompatibility of different races to live together, socialise, marry and so on, that somehow that was undesirable, and would lead to societal collapse is just pure racist bullshit.
But whatever is happening now is not that, racists might be harnessing the zeitgeist, but they're not the drivers. I keep banging on about this but back in the day when I was heavily involved in the Anti-Nazi League, the racists were tiny in number, screaming mostly into a void, there was a heavy East End influence to them but they had little broad appeal and beyond the odd councillor no electoral clout.
This is different and it's in the difference that this will be won or lost. Claiming there's no difference, references to Powell, calling everyone who disagrees with you racist is a dead end, more important still and this is the kicker, it's not working.
This is different and it's in the difference that this will be won or lost. Claiming there's no difference, references to Powell, calling everyone who disagrees with you racist is a dead end, more important still and this is the kicker, it's not working.
I don't know the content of Hitler's speeches, but I don't need to know to know I'm against whatever was in them.
I don't judge people on the basis of race and while not knowing anything about the contents of Powell's speech beyond the oft quoted "rivers of blood" I believe Powell did, if I'm wrong then I'm sure you'll correct me.
This isn't different.
I asked you to finally actually say why this was different 2 days ago, and everything you came out with was Powellist. White flight - tick; lack of integration leading to segregated communities - tick; the government ignoring the average man's thinking - tick; the idea that plurality is "a lie", the idea we're at a tipping point - tick.
The only difference between your reasoning and Powell's is you've replaced his term "multi-ethnic" with "multi-culturalism".
So it inherently can't be different when everything you've said is to blame was also said by crackpots 60 years ago, which is why your ignorance to what past right wing people said is so ridiculous. You're pretending you know about past waves of anti-immigrant sentiment when telling everyone this one is *definitely* different, and then in the next comment boasting that you don't know what they actually said.
More broadly, there's massive paralells between Powell and Reform et al
- Framing immigration as a threat to British culture and national identity.
- Claiming this period of high immigration is a national turning point beyond which we'll reach a point of no return.
- Claiming to speak for a silent majority.
- Populist framing that they're challenging established power systems and positioning the debate as political elite + immigrants vs the working man.
- Linking immigration to crime and national security and warning of mass conflict if they're ignored.
- Claiming that "ordinary working people" were being screwed over by immigration economically and that we're all subsidising immigrants to our own detriment.
That's the rhetorical similarities, we've already spoken about the fact that this was spurred by the economic similarities - preceded by a decade of slow growth, weak £, anxiety about Britian's reduced status in the world. A massive housing shortage, lower quality of public services. An economic climate where people are struggling, and far right populists can arrive and tell them that one, highly visible minority group like immigrants are to blame for everything.
It's honestly ridiculous that you've spent the last few months railing against the idea that there's any comparison between today's far right narratives and those of the 1960's and early 70's only to then admit you're ignorant to the arguments that were being made back then but still think you're right that there's no comparison.