Thoughts on Brexit from Someone Who Spends Time in the “Forgotten Places”

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The Brexit vote in itself proves the point. Sure, David Cameron has announced his intention to resign, but where are the the resignations of EU technocrats? If anyone was discredited by this vote it’s the leadership of the EU, but they aren’t going anywhere. Why? Because they’re experts, and experts stay around forever. Like Larry Summers, bank executives and neocon war mongers, these people never suffer the consequences of their actions and thus remain free to run around endlessly destroying the world from their unassailable perches of power.

That’s the point. Being an expert does not make you infallible. Your credentials should certainly offer you a seat at the policy making table, but from that moment on you had better demonstrate performance. It’s the same way with a corporate job. The resume gets you in the door, but your production day in and day out keeps you in the seat.

– From last week’s post: Brexit = Death of the Technocrats

As I noted in my Brexit article published Friday, there are so many different angles one could tackle when writing on this monumental event, it’s extremely challenging to choose just one.

Fortunately, there are various writers and thinkers out there willing to explore the less obvious implications and lessons from the Brexit vote. One of these is people is Chris Arnade and his recent article published at Medium is too good not to share.

Enjoy:

My first reaction last night, which I still fully stand behind, was this,

Brexit is pushback against huge social and economic changes that have devalued a great many people.

They are changes that have demanded many people give up long standing notions of who they are, what is their place in the world, and questioned how they find meaning.

That same anger, and the reasons for it, is here in the US also.

I work with addicts these days and have spent the last five years driving all across the country, spending weeks/months/years in places many live in, but few visit. Places filled with poverty and addiction.

What I learned is that addiction is on the same spectrum as suicide. It is a slower form, but comes from the same place.

It led me to one of the first books to study suicide, by Émile Durkheim who wanted to understand why people would kill themselves.

He suggests people needed a sense of integration and regulation, to feel part of something that worked. They needed strong bonds to a larger society. Without that, they often took their own life. He called that sense of isolation or disruption, Anomie.

I see Anomie wherever I go. The things that used to give people meaning: Their work, their union, their family, their church, their bridge club, their elks club, whatever, have been eroded. And often mocked.

We over the last 50 years have replaced that, and now demand that people be valued by their intellect, and their wealth. We have further diminished whole groups of people by increasing the amount we reward the new and few “winners.”

To make things even worse, we often outright mock anyone who can’t keep up, or doesn’t fit in with the new order. We call them dumb. Idiots. Religious freaks. Rednecks. Thugs. Hoodlums. Ghetto trash. White trash.

The language we use to talk about those who have been left behind is rife with nasty attempts to turn them into lesser humans. We use the tactics of racism, and apply it to economic losers.

Now here’s the famously embarrassing tweet that will launch a thousand referendums.

And often they respond by joining racist groups. Or latching onto racist policies and agendas.

Which makes it easier to demean them, because racism is bad. Bad. Bad. Bad. And as a kid of a German Jew who barely made it out of Nazi Germany, as a kid who grew up in a small southern town. As a kid who had our car windows shot out (while his dad was in it!) because my dad was a “Nigger loving Jew”. Yes racism is awful. Bad. Disgusting. Nasty.

But racism, and fascism, are very successful scams that sell to the desperate. Fascism understands that people want to feel valued and integral part of something larger. Racism is, sadly, the easiest and cheapest way to do that.

So, yes push back against the racism. Loudly.

But offer something else, a way for others to feel included. Provide a process, other than getting an education in an elite school, that gives people meaning, solidarity, and value.

Simply saying they are not valid, or lesser, or they are stupid. Or they are idiots. That is racism’s ugly cousin elitism, so don’t turn it into a fight of the ugly. You think that is going to help people feel included?

If you hate racism, then you really really really should hate any economic and social system that creates and rewards massive inequality. Because when you get that. You get racism.

And that is the system we have built and now have. That is the system that most everyone screaming about the dumb racists is part of, usually supports, and wins from.

PS: Why Trump voters are not “Complete idiots”

Thank you for writing this, Chris.

For my thoughts on Brexit and “experts,” see: Brexit = Death of the Technocrats

For a prior article by Chris, highlighted earlier this year, see: Former Citigroup Trader Explains How Wall Street Came to Own the Clintons and the Democratic Party

In Liberty,
Michael Krieger

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4 thoughts on “Thoughts on Brexit from Someone Who Spends Time in the “Forgotten Places””

  1. WOW. This was an amazing piece. So cogent. Cuts right to the heart of our current self delusion. My next question is , where is the solution? And where do the banks into the problem?

    Reply
  2. What is with the Donald Trump look alike in England that wants to run for Prime Minister with the same hair color/ birds nest style haircut and both have the same /identical negative views?

    Reply
    • Andy is a good little soldier who clearly buys what the corporate media dishes out.

      Yup vote for Hillary… more for WS and the Clintons less for the un-connected… more wars, fracking, debt slaves, pay for play, TPP, Private Health Insurance (she calls getting everyone on the hook for private insurance “Universal Healthcare”… imagine that Hillary lying!)… and a few more broken vases (and lives) in the WH.

      And really, have you no soul… think of the Interns!

  3. Very good piece. When we describe people in such terms, we are unwittingly assisting the elites in their divide-and-conquer strategy.

    Reply

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