WE MEAN IT
MAN: PUNK ROCK AND ANTI-RACISM - or, DEATH IN JUNE NOT MYSTERIOUS
by
Stewart Home
The hoary debate about punk
rock and politics was recently given a boost by the publication of Punk Rock:
So What? edited by Roger Sabin. (1) The editor's essay 'I Won't Let That Dago
By: Rethinking Punk and Racism' is one of several pieces that raises the issue
of punk politics directly. Claiming that there is a consensus about British punk
rock of the seventies being 'essentially solid with the anti-racist cause', Sabin
sees a punk alliance with the organisations Rock Against Racism (RAR) and the
Anti-Nazi League (ANL) as providing the capstone of this myth. Sabin deflates
what he sees as the fable of punk anti-racism by trotting out a few examples of
unsavoury lyrics and media sound bites.
While Sabin suggests that some of the bands who played RAR benefits suffered from
unconscious racist blind spots (Joy Division, Sham 69, the Art Attacks, and Adam
and the Ants), his article would have been more illuminating if he'd examined
the relationship between musicians who have been accused of expressing racist
and/or fascist views and SWP front groups as well as the effect (if any) this
anti-racist organisation had on the subsequent development of those who supported
it. (2) Since bands with managers were able to appear at RAR events without having
any contact with the organisation, I will deal with an example of this type of
"non-connection" before moving onto more complex interactions between
punk rockers and Trotskyism. Edwin Pouncey who fronted the Art Attacks in the
late-seventies was horrified to discover that Sabin considered his band's song
Arabs In 'Arrads to be racist: "I didn't write the lyrics to that song, they
were by our drummer John Haney. But all our songs were little stories, they weren't
necessarily written from our point of view. We certainly never shopped in Harrods,
so it didn't bother us who went there. We played Arabs In 'Arrads for RAR and
no one complained about it. RAR phoned us up and asked us to play, our manager
dealt with them. He thought it was a good idea to do RAR, we didn't have any problems
with them, they paid our manager and he split the money between us." (3)
On the late-seventies punk scene the Art Attacks were not considered to have an
image problem - indeed, since their bass player Marion Fudger worked for the feminist
paper Spare Rib, they could even be seen as having a certain political cache.
However, RAR was not averse to putting on bands that could draw a crowd but were
considered politically suspect by the music press. The official RAR publication
Temporary Hoarding ran a Lucy Toothpaste interview with Adam and the Ants, a band
that Sabin takes to task for their song Puerto Rican. The feature is accompanied
by a picture of the band playing a benefit for RAR on 17 June 1978. Despite allowing
the Ants to play RAR benefits, the organisation nevertheless shows considerable
hostility towards them: "Adam and the Ants phoned us up to say they wanted
to play gigs for Rock Against Racism. This didn't seem to fit in with the accusations
their reviewers are always making that this band have an unhealthy interest in
the Nazis. Well, we don't believe what we read in the music press either, but
we decided to interrogate - I mean, interview - them, anyway...." (4) The
interview kicked off with the band being asked why they wanted to play RAR gigs.
Drummer Dave Barbarossa explained:
"It's in my interest,
isn't it! I'm a darkie! How can they call us a Nazi band when we've got a coloured
drummer! I've got a jewish mother and the other side of my family is black. I
mean surely I must be the most anti-Nazi and anti-racist bloke! If the National
Front ever get in power I'll be kicked out of the country right away. I wouldn't
go around supporting people who wrote songs in favour of Nazism. I've got a kid
and wife you know. I've got a lot to worry about if they get in. That's why doing
these gigs are good for the band because it's important to do this just to clear
the air...
RAR: Well you've made it clear that you personally don't believe in fascism. But
the whole Nazi thing is often treated as though it had a sort of sordid glamour
about it, which might appeal to people who are fed up and frustrated and think
it sounds more exciting than boring everyday life. Don't you think that doing
songs like these might encourage that?
DAVE: The blokes I went to school with are all in the National Front now, they've
told me to my face, and I've been beaten up by the NF, my brother has, because
I live in Wood Green - and if I thought I was playing in a group that was furthering
- bringing out their fantasies and making them a reality - or sort of helping
the National Front, I'd leave. Fucking hell. They're just humorous songs, they're
really funny, you can laugh at Nazism in those songs, instead of being frightened...
(RAR) Dave says the songs make fun of Nazism. But then Adam lets the cat out of
the bag (and it is a tom cat). He finds little German girls appealing. Perhaps
he finds the concentration camps appalling - but you wouldn't know it from the
song...
(DAVE): I'm not a politician cos I can't get it together to think - the moment
I start thinking about politics all these things start coming up, and I wonder
how they got there in the first place. And so the only thing we can do is play
these gigs and raise some money for you and support you publicly....
(RAR conclusion addressed to the reader rather than the band) So now you know."
While RAR were happy to take
the money raised by Adam and the Ants, the organisation clearly felt nothing but
contempt for the band, so it is perhaps not surprising that the alliance between
this mismatched pairing didn't last long. (5) RAR enjoyed a longer term relationship
with "political" punk band Crisis who not only journeyed to many parts
of the UK to play RAR benefits, but also did a tour of Norway organised by this
SWP front. The close relationship between Crisis and RAR was facilitated by the
fact that the punk group's bassist Tony Wakeford was a dues-paying member of the
Socialist Workers Party. Equally fortuitously, rhythm guitarist Doug Pearce belonged
to the International Marxist Group (Tariq Ali's operation) which helped the band
to get Anti-Nazi League gigs, since IMG members worked themselves into positions
of power within this broadly based alliance. Wakeford's political affiliations
served to secure yet more gigs connected to the Right To Work campaign (another
SWP front) which with the lure of new wave rock music had no trouble attracting
punks to events that might be viewed as conflicting with the subculture's anti-work
ethos.
Despite their anti-fascist activism - reflected in lyrics such as: "search
and destroy, search and destroy the Nazis, the National Front, smash the National
Front, annihilate, annihilate, annihilate" and "I am a militant, I am
a picket, I fought at Lewisham, I fought at Grunwick" (6) - Crisis eventually
became disillusioned with Trotskyism. At the time Doug Pearce bewailed: "But
what I wish was that the left would see us on their side instead of the enemy.
I mean we feel more alienated at their gigs than ordinary ones. They don't give
us any credit and the money we get they don't even donate in our name! The left
in general are really weird, they're still scared of punk, and that's why a lot
of progress hasn't been made." (7) Wakeford speaking about the Crisis-ANL-RAR
alliance many years later spat: "It ended because we were used by political
parties, whose very nature, especially near the top, were full of self-seeking
people. The stories are legend and it is too boring to go into. We got fucked."
(8)
There appear to have been two interrelated problems in the relationship Crisis
developed with organisations such as RAR. Despite their membership of Trotskyist
groups, the lyrics Pearce and Wakeford wrote all too often show them sliding into
anarchism - "I don't need your flag and I won't kiss it, I don't need your
law, you can stick it up your arse..." from Militant; "Don't rebel you
won't get thanked, you'll just get run over by a tank, don't wanna buy the Morning
Star, just be a boss in your big black car.." from Back In The USSR; and
"We hate all the coppers and they're just a bunch of Nazis, SPG, SPG..."
from SPG. These anarchic tendencies were even more obvious in the way Pearce (with
back up from Wakeford) ran the group - remaining staunchly "independent"
and refusing to deal with managers or major record labels against the wishes of
other band members. In the eighties, anarchist bands were to run campaigns against
major record labels, whereas Trotskyists would sign the biggest deal they could
get in the interests of putting their message across to the broadest possible
audience. Despite the lip service they paid to Trotskyism, Pearce and Wakeford
were in practice closer to Proudhonian anarchism.
The inability of Crisis to tow the party line was a problem for the SWPers who
organised many of their RAR concerts, but it would have been resolved more readily
if Wakeford had not been a "comrade" (blame was inevitably deflected
from him). Incompatibility combined with the undisciplined nature of the band
and their friends - who got in fights with fascists, rival punk gangs and even
each other - created tensions. These pressures often resulted in the band being
treated shabbily, for example not having their expenses fully covered and not
being thanked for their work. There were even instances when the band turned up
to do a RAR concert only to find that the PA they'd been promised had failed to
materialise, or else the equipment was faulty (in one instance this resulted in
Doug Pearce being hospitalised after receiving a serious electric shock).
There is a notion that explains a great deal not only about punk rock in general
and Crisis in particular, but also the subsequent evolution of both Pearce and
Wakeford. - and that is a hankering after "authenticity". The motive
force in everything Pearce and Wakeford have done as "adults" is not
politics but aesthetics. It was an aesthetic desire for "authenticity"
that led them to join Trotskyist groups despite the fact that they were dandies.
Pearce, in particular, has always behaved as though it is possible to live differently
in this world - a prima donna act in which he pretends to have risen above capitalism
while the commodity economy is still intact - and all of anarchism is evident
in this aesthetic pose. Aesthetically (and therefore politically) Crisis were
much closer to anarchist noise merchants such as Crass than later "Trotskyist"
bands from the Redskins to Blaggers ITA (whose bolshevism was an outgrowth of
Bakuninism, whereas both Pearce and the Crass are much closer to the anarchism
of Proudhon). Crisis wanted to be "real" and utilised politics as a
short cut to realising what is ultimately an aesthetic position. In chasing the
chimera of personal authenticity rather than the reality of revolutionary transformation,
Pearce and Wakeford came to believe their political posturing was sincere. This
fanatical but nonetheless deluded self-belief in a political mission was the basis
on which Crisis sold themselves to their fans (some of whom were actually attracted
by the hilarious gap between what Pearce and Wakeford believed about themselves
and what they actually represented). Given the inability of the aesthetically
driven Crisis to deliver on what they'd declared as their political positions,
it is hardly surprising that the dominant members of the band ended up breaking
with RAR and ultimately conventional Trotskyism.
Despite their disillusionment with leftism and popular fronts, when Pearce and
Wakeford formed a new band called Death In June (DIJ) their first gig was a benefit
for Workers Against Racism (a cat's paw of the Revolutionary Communist Party)
at Central London Polytechnic towards the end of 1981. At this stage, anyone puzzled
by the para-military uniforms and fascist symbolism utilised by DIJ was offered
reassurance along the lines of: "When we first formed we were investigating
fascism, no bones about that. It's interesting to see what this tainted ideology
which has been so powerful had to say in the beginning." (9) The fact that
DIJ had publicly affirmed their support for anti-racism by playing a WAR benefit
appeared to confirm this. While the lyrical content of songs such as Till The
Living Flesh Is Burned betrayed an unhealthy interest in Nazism, for a time it
seemed possible that DIJ had an anti-fascist agenda. However, interviews with
Doug Pearce dating from the mid-eighties onwards make it clear that if DIJ set
out with the intention of demystifying fascism, they were nonetheless confused
about the issues involved.
This is what Pearce had to say about the Night of the Long Knives to the music
paper Sounds in 1985: "Our interest doesn't come from killing all opposition,
as it's been interpreted, but from identification with or understanding of the
leftist elements of the SA which were purged, or murdered by the SS. That day
is extremely important in human history... They were planning execution or overthrow
of Hitler, so he wouldn't be around. We'd be living in a completely different
world, I should imagine... It's fascinating that a few people held the destiny
of the world and mankind in their hands for those few hours and let it slip, and
it could've gone either way." (10) It is clear from this that Pearce lacks
not only any understanding of politics and history, but plain common sense. Since
the brownshirts represented the "left-wing" within National Socialism,
they were necessarily fascists. It is the nature of fascist movements to expand
or collapse. If Hitler had been replaced as head of the German state by another
Nazi leader in 1934 it would have made little difference to "the world"
and "mankind" - since resentment about the Versailles treaty was one
of the things that brought the Nazis to power and was leading inextricably to
war. Likewise, the culture of anti-semitism that had poisoned much of Europe for
hundreds of years was exploited by the Nazis for propaganda purposes and the entire
National Socialist leadership was eager to take this racism to a murderous conclusion.
What is going on beneath Pearce's meaningless bluff about "the destiny of
the world" is so obvious that it hardly needs explaining: the Trotskyist
myth of betrayal is being attached to National Socialism with Hitler becoming
Stalin and Ernst Rohm becoming Trotsky. As if to notify the world that his conversion
to "left"-fascism is complete, Pearce raved elsewhere: "At the
start of the eighties, Tony and I were involved in radical left politics and beneath
it history students. In search of a political view for the future we came across
National Bolshevism which is closely connected with the SA hierarchy. People like
Gregor Strasser and Ernst Röhm who were later known as 'second revolutionaries'
attracted our attention." (11)
However, being a firm believer in contradictions, Pearce has offered other explanations
for his interest in fascism when it has been broached via the issue of his enthusiasm
for dressing up in Nazi uniforms: "The question did arise but they (the music
press) approached it from the right angle, the fetishistic side, the attraction
within of a uniform, there's a certain kind of appeal, a sexual power to the thing."
(12) This is a rather hackneyed tactic. Pearce defends his interest in Nazi uniforms
on the basis that it is a manifestation of his sexuality. If Pearce merely dressed
up in fascist togs at home, one would certainly think of him as sad but he would
attract less criticism than he does by projecting this "fetish" in public.
Being gay does not justify a liking for the garb of fascist oppressors. A distinction
needs to be made here between commoditised sexual fetishism and gay liberation.
The so called pink pound and the commercialisation of sex do not threaten capitalism,
they buttress it, whereas the struggle for human emancipation from the commodity
economy - which must necessarily include gay liberation - attacks the sexual fetishisation
of oppression and its master Profit.
Pearce has consistently marketed DIJ on the basis that aesthetic fascism can be
sold as pornography. The technique is simply now you see it, now you don't, or
as Pearce puts it: "Our subjects have a political significance, but in a
much more oblique way, we don't say, it's this or it's that, like the way Crisis
did. It's in this way we're different." (13) More accurately, DIJ are sold
- and it is necessary to emphasise salesmanship since this is Pearce's forte (he
is a businessman who runs a record label which releases both his own output and
that of other "artists") - on the basis that the "group" might
be politically dodgy. Contradictory messages are circulated and the fans can then
spend hours wrestling with the problem of whether or not DIJ are fascists. DIJ's
game-plan for increased market penetration entails a constant slippage between
the aesthetic and the political. Pearce uses symbols associated with Nazism but
champions right-wing anarchism as a political creed, often articulating his free
market doctrine in occult or religious terms: "I am my own religion. I am
my own faith. To believe in oneself is the final cult. It's the only real magic
which really works. That's why it's also the most difficult." (14) But given
the principle of contradiction on which he works, Pearce has also claimed: "The
work itself was always deemed more important than the cultivation of individual
egos or personalities. Symbols are more suggestive of DIJ's work than bland mug
shots." (15) Or spinning off in a slightly different direction: "My
actions are instinctual. I feel sometimes I am too much a puppet of my destiny.
But my path is constantly re-affirmed, so... I am doing exactly what I am supposed
to be doing!" (16) In other words, drumming to the beat of commodity fetishism,
making money by shifting product.
Pearce's trick of sliding from one thing to another quickly becomes tiresome,
particularly when it is premised on such a shallow manipulation of symbols. Nevertheless,
done as if in earnest this con attracts an audience on the Gothic and Industrial
scenes (youth subcultures). A typical example of Pearce's sales pitch is given
by former Crass fan Robert Forbes in his book Misery and Purity: A History and
Personal Interpretation of Death In June where the title track of the album Brown
Book is discussed as "a trap that was set and sprung." (17) The title
"was taken from the books of the same name which were published before WWII
reporting the conditions in Nazi Germany and then after that war by the East German
authorities listing Nazi and war criminals supposedly living in West Germany and
their influence over that country." Over a vocal rendition of the Nazi battle
anthem The Horst Wessel are various voices taped in German, including a shout
of "Achtung" (warning). Doug Pearce is allowed to explain: "No
matter what I did I was accused of being this, that and the other, by the music
press. I thought, alright, let's go all out. On that album I went for contradictions...
A Brownshirt is talking about a variety of matters and taking an idiotic stand
on some things that were completely anti-SA and much more SS. He accused the SS
of being homosexuals which is what the SA were infamous for. That speech was juxtaposed
by the half-jewish grandmother saying that life was like jumping from one ice
float to another, with each jump they get smaller and smaller. The end is inevitable."
So, by juxtaposing obvious and well known Nazi symbolism with some relatively
obscure anti-Nazi elements, Pearce imagines he has sprung a trap! Forbes quotes
him as saying: "Some people view the name, image and words of a group on
such a superficial level that misinterpretations are bound to occur. However,
that happens all the time in life - there are loads of stupid people about."
(18) Elsewhere, Pearce defends his use of fascist imagery by saying: "Obviously
people have fallen into the trap of taking it on a surface value. That is their
problem." (19) This cuts two ways, firstly there are those who identify with
the symbolism Pearce is utilising, then there are those who oppose it. Pearce
imagines he benefits both ways, since hysterical attacks upon DIJ fuel speculation
that he is dodgy and thus help shift units of his product to those wanting to
consume fascism as pornography. Pearce is a businessman and it is a matter of
indifference to him if his fans join far-Right groups such as White Aryan Resistance
or Green Anarchist - all that interests him is making money: "Too many people
rely upon others to carry them - to accept their responsibilities for them. That
is one of the reasons why I now work alone in DIJ. If I need help I work with
other leaders. There is no room for passengers. Everyone must speak for themselves.
The time for excuses is at an end." (20)
From the quotes that are laced through Forbes' book it is apparent that as time
has gone on, Pearce became increasingly immersed in fascist modes of thinking.
What Pearce might imagine is his Great Wall Of China - a split between aesthetic
and political positions - turns out on examination to be as flimsy as the supposedly
impregnable Maginot Line: "DIJ unlike the past have nothing to do with conventional
politics. We have nothing to tell or offer anybody in that department." (21)
The right-wing (individualistic) anarchism to which Pearce subscribes politically
was one of the main currents that fed into ideological fascism. Rather than being
separate and distinct, Pearce's political and aesthetic positions are very closely
related. Indeed, Proudhon was acclaimed as the founder of National Socialism during
the Nazi occupation of France, and Pearce's xenophobic views are very close to
those of the founding father of anarchism: "I think European culture is the
most important in the world and it's threatened by other principal cultures, for
example American, Soviet. Whereas it has so much to offer, we should be proud
of it." (22)
Rather than Pearce controlling the symbolism he is using, the symbolism controls
him - as long ago as January 1984 he had to sack his song writing partner Tony
Wakeford from DIJ for getting involved with Patrick Harrington and the Strasserite
faction of the National Front. (23) Likewise, for Pearce all recent history revolves
around Hitler: "The most influential man of this century has been Adolf Hitler!
He's shaped the world we live in today with his hate and destruction." (24)
Pearce has no understanding of historical causality, the hate and destruction
Hitler exploited was produced by a wide range of factors that cannot be attributed
to a single man. Asked why he wears the death's head, Pearce produced a reply
that was every bit as stupid as his outburst about Hitler: "I just do, that's
all. The identification for me in those elements is like total belief, that's
why I'm fascinated, y'know? I'm still searching for total belief." (25) There
is a stage in child development where babies who are totally dependent on the
care of others believe they are omnipotent, and despite reaching middle-age Pearce
is unable to dispense with this delusion. His desire to believe that a handful
of men shape history reflects his inability to grow up. Since Pearce would like
to be a great man, he is unable to accept that such men do not exist and that
rather than being "destined" to join them, he is simply an ego-maniac.
While Pearce has been doubly infantalised by his job as a pop singer and involvement
in a commoditised fetish culture which places a premium on youth, this does not
excuse his crass manipulation of fascist tropes to sell records. While there are
commentators who have become hysterical about Pearce, the best way of dealing
with his scam is to expose him for what he is - an anarchist dry goods salesman.
There is a continuity between Crisis and DIJ in terms of both imagery centred
on fascism/anti-fascism and a desire for authenticity that is aesthetically driven.
It is difficult to imagine Crisis ever making much of an impression without RAR
to mediate their presence on the punk scene, or DIJ existing at all without Wakeford
and Pearce being slowly seduced by the ideas and imagery RAR set out to oppose
(a seduction that began with these two musicians learning the power of political
symbolism - at least partially - through their involvement with RAR). I would
stress symbols and imagery in all this, both Crisis and DIJ were aesthetically
overloaded to the detriment of both their politics and their music. Although very
much a product of RAR, Crisis were also in many ways an anomaly - within a punk
culture that thrived on confusion about identity and political belief, Crisis
were far more confused than most of their peers. The Art Attacks appear to have
been unmoved by their brush with RAR, Adam and the Ants merely ruffled. In contrast
to this, Wakeford and Pearce provide examples of "individuals" who were
transformed by RAR, but their deep involvement produced effects at odds with the
avowed intentions of those who'd set up the organisation. (26) That said, to properly
evaluate the role RAR and anti-racism played within both the punk scene and the
broader political culture of the seventies and eighties, we need further studies
of people touched by and/or involved in these campaigns. It would be wrong to
generalise solely on the basis of Crisis/DIJ.
Footnotes:
1. Punk Rock: So What? The
cultural legacy of punk edited by Roger Sabin (Routledge, London 1999).
2. I will focus on RAR since Paul Gilroy has already produced an incisive critique
of ANL in 'Two Sides Of Anti-Racism', Chapter 4 of There Ain't No Black In The
Union Jack (Routledge, London 1992): "The definition of racism which guided
RAR's practice was not narrow but extensive. It recognized that racism had become
a condensed sign for all the unacceptable social relations of "Krisis Time
1977'... The attempt to impose the elimination of Nazism as a priority on the
diverse and complex political consciousness crystallised by RAR was a miscalculation.
The narrow definition of the problem of 'race' - as a product of fascism... imposed
a shorter life and more limited aims on the movement... The Rasta-inspired pursuit
of 'Equal rights and Justice' was being forsaken... It was replaced by the more
modest aim of isolating and eliminating the fascist parties at the polls... the
exclusive identification of racism with Nazis was to create problems for anti-racism
in the future..." (pages 129-132) From what I have to say about RAR it will
be obvious that I consider Gilroy's analysis of the organisation a little too
sanguine. Likewise, while I concur with Gilroy's criticisms of the ANL, I would
hasten to add that I do not feel this analysis should be extended to groups such
as Anti-Fascist Action - whose engagement in community self-defence against fascism
is useful and necessary despite the obviously limited nature of the political
objectives involved.
3. Phone interview 2/11/99.
4. Temporary Hoarding #6, London Summer 1978.
5. RAR's disinterest in those who are unlikely to tow a party line and the unwillingness
of its activists to engage in debates that might help recalcitrant individuals
develop progressive political positions is evident from the Ants interview: "ADAM:
There's one other number in the set that I must tell you about. I do a song Light
up a beacon on a Puerto Rican and I'll tell you why I called it that. The Puerto
Ricans in New York are on the bottom, on the floor, and lowest. You've only got
to see West Side Story to know that number. If you get robbed by a Puerto Rican
he nicks all your shoes and everything, they're really desperate people cos they're
treated like fucking shit by the whites. Anyway, in my song, the story is about
a white woman who has actually got a pet Puerto Rican. I saw Roots, and what shocked
me in that wasn't the slavery, wasn't the conditions, it was when that guy went
into the black slave community, and they said to him, 'Look, we're animals' -
they'd accepted being fucking animals. The old black guys were going 'Don't do
nothing don't react' because it had been drummed into them. And that really made
me sick, that really got to me. The fact that a human being can accept that he's
garbage! So my song is about a white woman who has reduced a human being to dog
status - because I thought that was a damn sight more powerful in a lyric than
saying look at those poor Puerto Ricans. I've sung that song to Puerto Ricans
from New York, and they loved it man. Because it was singing about Puerto Ricans,
and they just don't get sung about. RAR: Can we talk about something else now..."
6. The Crisis singles and mini-album are collected with a few additional tracks
on the CD We Are All Jews And Germans (Ourbouros, London 1997). Lyrics are either
taken from this source or in the case of songs not included on this CD (Search
And Destroy, SPG), from privately circulated live recordings.
7. Cited in Misery and Purity: A History and Personal Interpretation of Death
In June by Robert Forbes (Jara Press, Amersham 1995) page 212.
8. Forbes ibid. 212.
9. Doug Pearce cited in Forbes ibid. 36.
10. Forbes ibid. 15.
11. Forbes ibid. 15.
12. Forbes ibid. 23.
13. Forbes ibid. 17.
14. Forbes ibid. 21.
15. Forbes ibid. 28.
16. Forbes ibid. 130-131.
17. Forbes ibid. 100-101.
18. Forbes ibid. 23.
19. Forbes ibid. 36. Clearly there comes a point in the reception of cultural
artefacts where those responsible for them feel a need to explain their intentions
if they perceive them to have been misunderstood. For example, the subject positions
in some of my novels (for example Pure Mania, Defiant Pose and Red London) were
and sometimes still are misread as my own - as a result, I felt it necessary to
correct this impression in an number of interviews and essays (see for example
"Anarchism Is Stupid' in my book Confusion Incorporated, Codex, Hove 1999).
I did not - and do not - want to be mistaken for an anarchist. Pearce, who patently
is an anarchist, doesn't seem much bothered when he is also taken to be a fascist
(the labels anarchist and fascist are not necessarily incompatible). He sets out
to create confusion on this score without ever realising that his right-wing anarchism
is largely indistinguishable from fascist politics.
20. Forbes ibid. 75.
21. Forbes ibid. 21.
22. Forbes ibid. 22.
23. A signed letter from Pearce stating his reasons for sacking Wakeford from
DIJ appears on page forty-nine of Forbes' book. The evolution of the fascist fraction
Wakeford involved himself with is instructive. The former NF leader Patrick Harrington
ended up as a confidant of Green Anarchist associate and occasional article contributor
Larry O'Hara. Another Green Anarchist supporter David Black has bizarrely claimed
that Patrick Harrington isn't a fascist (see the article 'Green Anarchists Fall
Out' in Student Outlook #11, Summer Term 1995). Meanwhile another splinter from
the Harringtonian faction of the NF went through several name changes before briefly
emerging as Radical Shift and then merging with Alternative Green, a splinter
from Green Anarchist. As far as one is able to identify the politics of DIJ, they
appear remarkably similar to those of Green Anarchist. For example the track 'Bring
In The Night' on the album Wall of Sacrifice begins with a 'Psalm Of Destruction':
"Man destroys his own life while also destroying all life on earth, neither
admitting to his destruction nor even recognising it. Man has squandered his powers
and our scorn for him has grown boundless. By its pitiful motions mankind has
demonstrated its unworthiness, let the destruction it has unleashed devour it."
In a similar vein Green Anarchist has advocated mass murder in a series of articles
on what it calls irrationalism (this one from Green Anarchist # 51, Spring 98):
"They cannot jail us for we do not exist. The Irrationalist is the man or
woman sitting next to you in the tube train. We have sarin canisters in our pockets
and hatred in our minds... It doesn't matter what Joe and Edna Couch Potato think
about it. They weren't there, they won't do anything to stop it, and yet the government
automatons of Oklahoma are still dead and the building has been reduced to a pile
of dust... The Irrationalists do not claim to act on behalf of anybody except
themselves. Why should Joe and Edna couch Potato derive any benefit from what
the Irrationalists do? They can either join in somewhere, or fuck off and die,
it's up to them, it's up to you. It's not whether you agree or disagree that counts,
but what you do..." Despite vehement condemnations of this series of articles,
some of it even coming from other anarchist groups, Green Anarchist have persisted
with their chosen theme and as I write have recently reiterated their position
in 'The Irrationalists 71' (Green Anarchist # 57-58 Autumn 99:, pages 15-17) "ACE
and the others are so very upset about Aum Shin Rikyo. Commuters and City of London
financial sector components, dedicated to turning the wheels of capitalism, rushing
to work on the underground... Or perhaps they work in the media, pushing out yet
more lies, bullshit, propaganda, pacifying chat shows, crap shows, soap opera
for sheep to consume, all travelling on the underground. Tax payers one and all.
How just and proportionate that they should breath sarin..." At the end of
this article there is an advert which states: "We're issuing Steve Booth's
Irrationalists in pamphlet form as a big 'fuck you' to all the so-called anarchos
who can't face the future and don't understand what free speech is. With all the
fuss they've kicked up, it should sell like hot cakes."
24, Forbes ibid. 15.
25. Forbes ibid. 20.
26. In the context of this article, I didn't consider the music of DIJ to be of
any consequence. However, a brief description might save readers the trouble of
searching out the records. Early DIJ is basically Joy Division with trumpets.
After Tony Wakeford was kicked out of the band DIJ sounded more like The Stranglers
(albeit with a hint of a "dance" influence). Later on acoustic guitar
became a major element and the records can be compared to singer/song writers
such as Nick Drake. In the absence of a book that collects together a wide range
of Tony Wakeford interview quotes, I have concentrated on Doug Pearce. Hopefully
somebody with access to the relevant materials will deal with Wakeford more extensively
than I can right now. Wakeford currently fronts a band called Sol Invictus and
claims to have abandoned his former political affiliations. |