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London is Burning
August 19, 2011
Preventing conflicts is the work of politics; establishing peace is the work of education.
-Maria Montessori (1870-1952), Italian physician and educator

The Non Profit Quarterly offers these observations about the UK riots...

"It is hard to watch the news of civil unrest enveloping poorer and minority neighborhoods in London, Birmingham, Bristol, and elsewhere in the U.K.  What do the riots in U.K. cities tell us about conditions there — and is it a preview of what might occur in this country, given all the talk from U.S. lawmakers of future austerity measures and special deficit reduction 'super committees'?


"A Reuters analysis suggested that the unrest in the U.K. might be linked to a combination of massive spending cuts and 'a widening gap between rich and poor.'  One high-level executive consultant, Pepe Egger, said that the riots were 'the result of decades of growing divisions and marginalization, but austerity will almost certainly make it worse.  Yes, the police can restore control with massive force, but that is not sustainable either in the long term.  You have to accept that this may happen again.'  Offering a perspective from the street, a young person from London's Hackney neighborhood criticized bankers and politicians who got wealthier and more self-indulgent while the poor suffered program cuts: 'Everyone's heard about the police taking bribes, the members of Parliament stealing thousands with their expenses.  They set the example,' he said.  'It's time to loot.'

"...Trying to boil down the causes of complex social phenomena to single data points, such as cuts in youth programs or increases in an already wide wealth gap, is pretty fruitless.  But it’s important to recognize how the weakening of critical social safety net programs and the widening wealth gap contribute to and exacerbate the conditions that fuel unrest.

"Even more crucial may be the recognition that the Big Society’s weak response to the U.K. riots suggests that if human service providers continue to absorb the body blows of serial program cuts from federal, state, and municipal authorities, we risk a repeat of the experience in London.  With crippled government and charitable funding streams and an increasing reliance on volunteers to take the place of well-paid and well-trained staff, nonprofits here in the U.S. might find themselves, like their British counterparts, watching a police response when ultimately a different kind of short-term and long-run solution is needed."






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Comments (7)

Displaying 5 of 7 Comments   [ View all ]
Doug Jacobson · August 22, 2011
United States


I have been fighting for liberal causes/social justice for 40 years after experiencing the horrors of the VietNam war. The economic income/asset gap between the few that have and the many that do not have has existed for thousands of years. All members who claim to seek a just society must act to overcome this division. However, those who directly or indirectly resort to or reinforce violence as a means to this end only demonstarte that they lack integrity in that their behavior does not match their stated values. Both liberals and conservatives need to STOP reinforcing that violence is the solution to this problem if we are going to act with integrity as we struggle for economic justice. (Thanks to Judi Pack for highlighting how Norway responded to a terrible tragedy by acting with integrity to its country's non-violent values.)

ken kelin · August 19, 2011
kelins kid kare
casa grande, az, United States


Never is change easy. Yet, to make changes we need to know what is really going on and then move forward with open eyes, not blinders. Thanks you for the factual reminders. My own blinder is beginning to peel off.

geeta bhatt · August 19, 2011
the grand child care center
chicago, IL, United States


The world is changing very fast with all these science and technology.
No one can fool all of the people all of the time.
These unrest and violence every where are due to the selfishness of the people in power. The same situation is in India: Anna Hazare the follower of Mahatma Gandhian philosophy - with tools of nonviolence and fasting - is trying to sweep the corruption out of the system... Would he be successful?
Yesterday people in Chicago came on the street showing their concerns against the immigration law and illegal immigrants...
Thank you for bringing this subject for a talk.

Terry Kelly · August 19, 2011
Aurora, Canada


Me again, realizing that I said Anna Hazare was in England instead of India! Sorry folks!

Judi Pack · August 19, 2011
United States


Naomi Klein:
http://www.thenation.com/article/162809/daylight-robbery-meet-nighttime-robbery

I only wish countries could take a lesson from Norway. After horrific violence, their leader asserted Norway's values--not ranting about punishment and "thugs" or demonizing, Norway said we must step back to look at why these things happen, what contributed to it, and what we can do to prevent future horrors.



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