Os tumultos em Londres e o rock independente


Foto: Reuters

O fogo atingiu um dos depósitos da Sony, um prédio de 20 mil metros quadrados e três andares que, além de abrigar grande parte do estoque de CDs e DVDs de grandes gravadoras, também alugava espaço para os pequenos estoques das gravadoras menores, como Rough Trade, Touch & Go, Def Jux, Soul Jazz, Thrill Jockey, Ninja Tune, Chemikal Underground, Wall of Sound, Drag City, Kitsuné, Beggar’s Banquet, Warp, Kompakt, Mute e Domino. A lista de todas as gravadoras que tinham estoque no armazém pode ser lida aqui. Ainda é cedo para calcular o impacto desse prejuízo na indústria musical inglesa, mas não é pouca coisa.

4:20

Tumblr do dia: Photoshoplooter

As fotos com os saques que aconteceram após os tumultos londrinos são a deixa perfeita pra um monte de photoshopeiro fazer suas críticas à natureza da motivação desses ataques. Eis o Photoshoplooter.

QUEBRATUUUU…Ops

Maior agito em Londres…

Idéia pra Tumblr do dia: Eu quero ver é na Olimpíada…

Já que vieram com maior papo de que o tumblr que deu origem à essa idéia era falta de auto-estima do brasileiro, pessimismo inato, yadda yadda yadda…

Tumulto hipster

Essa, na capa do Guadian, é uma das imagens dos tumultos de Londres:

Um ícone não-ícone. O Subcomandante Marcos colide com a lógica No Logo ao contrário, um Rage Against the Machine bancado por uma corporação. Quem é o anonymous: o baderneiro ou a multinacional?

…Carry on

E se não os tumultos em Londres não aconteceram de uma hora pra outra?

E se tudo isso for uma bomba-relógio sendo detonada na hora certa?

Não era imprevisível, como dizem Mary Riddell, no Telegraph

It is no coincidence that the worst violence London has seen in many decades takes place against the backdrop of a global economy poised for freefall. The causes of recession set out by J K Galbraith in his book, The Great Crash 1929, were as follows: bad income distribution, a business sector engaged in “corporate larceny”, a weak banking structure and an import/export imbalance.

All those factors are again in play. In the bubble of the 1920s, the top 5 per cent of earners creamed off one-third of personal income. Today, Britain is less equal, in wages, wealth and life chances, than at any time since then. Last year alone, the combined fortunes of the 1,000 richest people in Britain rose by 30 per cent to £333.5 billion.

Europe’s leaders, our own Prime Minister and Chancellor included, were parked on sun-loungers as London burned. Although the epicentre of the immediate economic crisis is the eurozone, successive British governments have colluded in incubating the poverty, the inequality and the inhumanity now exacerbated by financial turmoil.

Britain’s lack of growth is not an economic debating point or a stick with which to beat George Osborne, any more than our deskilled, demotivated, under-educated non-workforce is simply a blot on the national balance sheet. Watch the juvenile wrecking crews on the city streets and weep for all our futures. The “lost generation” is mustering for war.

…E Nina Power, no Guardian:

Combine understandable suspicion of and resentment towards the police based on experience and memory with high poverty and large unemployment and the reasons why people are taking to the streets become clear. (Haringey, the borough that includes Tottenham, has the fourth highest level of child poverty in London and an unemployment rate of 8.8%, double the national average, with one vacancy for every 54 seeking work in the borough.)

(…)

Images of burning buildings, cars aflame and stripped-out shops may provide spectacular fodder for a restless media, ever hungry for new stories and fresh groups to demonise, but we will understand nothing of these events if we ignore the history and the context in which they occur.