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14/11/04
Everyone Hates the White Working - Class Male
Rod Liddle
Sunday
Times
White working-class British men are fighting a
war on two fronts. The first and most obvious is out there in Iraq where they
are doing the dirty — and rather dangerous — work of a government that seems
to loathe and despise them.
The second is back here at home where their
adversaries are pretty much everybody else in the country. Civilised polite
society has it in for the white working-class male. So it is with laudable
self-awareness and chutzpah that the Millwall supporters sing down at the Den:
“No one likes us, we don’t care.”
White working-class males are the almost
exclusive recipients of antisocial behaviour orders, which seem to have been
created with them in mind. The government berates them for their homophobia and
racism, for their loutish behaviour, for their slovenly diets and sexual
incontinence. They are useless at school.
There is also a fervent determination in
government circles to stop them enjoying the pleasures of nicotine, of which
they are the country’s most resolute aficionados — and they are perpetually
upbraided for getting drop-dead drunk every night. The clock is therefore
ticking on most of their preferred pastimes.
Meanwhile, they have middle-class and toff
social commentators with whom to contend. It is perfectly okay to sneer at the
white working-class male with his predilection for garish clothing in man-made
fibres and tattoos, his rude grammar and utter lack of social etiquette and
refinement. No quango or pressure group will censure you for a spot of chav-bashing.
There are plenty of people happy to earn a living kicking the hell out of the
white working-class male. And why not? It’s risk-free journalism, after all.
Bad enough, then, to have the fourth estate
and the polity slapping you around the head; but maybe we ought to draw the line
at the judiciary and the police.
I wonder if the name Harry Stanley rings any
bells with you? Harry was shot dead by two Metropolitan police officers for the
crime of walking down a street while carrying a table leg in a plastic bag. You
will probably be aware that the Met’s armed police officers went on strike
recently following the suspension of the two officers in question, but the name
of Harry Stanley was scarcely mentioned in the press reports, all of which
focused on the industrial action taken by the armed policemen in support of
their trigger-happy colleagues.
Harry was, of course, a white working-class
male. If he had been black or gay or female or, for that matter, a barrister or
a newspaper editor, I think it is fair to say the events would have been
reported differently. There would have been voices expressing outrage at the
killing of someone deemed to hail from either an oppressed minority group or a
“respectable” profession.
The clamouring for prosecution of the officers
— rather than their mere suspension — would surely not have been resisted by
the Crown Prosecution Service. But Harry’s killing has resulted in no
prosecution. And there has been no great clamouring. Be honest: you can’t
recall even hearing the name Harry Stanley, can you? The name Colin Stagg may be
more familiar to you. He murdered that pretty girl Rachel Nickell on Wimbledon
Common, didn’t he? Well, no he didn’t, it would seem.
It’s true that in 1993 he was arrested for
this horrible crime and spent a year in prison on remand — but the court threw
out the prosecution because quite clearly he’d been ensnared in a crude police
honeytrap.
Now, again at this point if Stagg had been
anything other than a rather thick chav, a white working-class male par
excellence with dubious habits and an unengaging personality, we might have
witnessed furious remonstrations at his appalling treatment. But instead
everybody, including the police and especially The Mail on Sunday, continued to
maintain that Stagg was in effect guilty.
And now the police have decided that actually
it wasn’t Stagg after all, but more likely a psychopath in Broadmoor called
Robert Napper, have we seen newspaper articles headlined “Colin Stagg: An
apology”? You’re having a laugh, guv. Instead, a sister paper, the Daily
Mail, concentrated its outrage on the fact that Stagg wants to claim a million
quid in compensation.
I’m usually opposed to such manifestations
of our “compensation culture” — but Stagg has been unemployed, indeed
unemployable, these past 10 years thanks to the police and some of our press. He
gets spat at and attacked in the street. So maybe we should say sorry and give
him the money.
If Stagg has few supporters, they are
nonetheless more numerous than those who would affix their flag to the masts of
the indisputably nasty young men accused of having murdered the black youngster
Stephen Lawrence.
Two judicial procedures have seen them, in
effect, cleared of this crime. But still they are persecuted. A couple of years
ago two of them — David Norris and Neil Acourt — were up in court again,
this time accused of racially abusing an off-duty black police officer.
The facts are these: the two men were in a car when they saw the aforementioned officer. Norris threw a paper cup at him and shouted “n*****!” Acourt reportedly laughed. For this, they each got a sentence of 18 months in prison, despite a lack of relevant previous convictions. That’s right: Acourt got 1½ years in prison for laughing at something his moronic friend had said.
Are we comfortable with that decision? Or do we not give a monkey’s because both defendants are ghastly people who offend our bourgeois liberal sensibilities?
Pronouncing sentence, Judge Carroll said Norris and Acourt were both “infected and invaded by gross and revolting racism”. I’m sure he’s right. But was Judge Carroll, in passing his sentence, not also infected and invaded by something (to appropriate his lordship’s somewhat portentous grammar)? Was 18 months an appropriate sentence for the crime of laughing at someone who shouted a foul word and threw a paper cup? Or was there some prejudice at work at the back of the judge’s mind?
Again, the civil liberties lobby was silent. Ken Livingstone, the mayor of London, put out a statement welcoming the men’s incarceration, although what the hell it had to do with him I am at a loss to understand.
The white working-class male used to have the Labour party to fight his corner. Those days, however, are long gone. The left thinks him politically uncouth; the right thinks him socially uncouth. Sometimes I wish the boys of the Black Watch and the Green Howards and the Welsh Guards would wise up. It is all still much as Kipling had it:
O it’s Tommy this, an’ Tommy
that, an’ “Tommy go away”;
But it’s “Thank you, Mister Atkins”,
when the band begins to play.
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