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Horror and Heartbreak in Croxteth
Posted by: Tony Mulhearn (---.range81-132.btcentralplus.com)
Date: August 29, 2007 08:28PM

HORROR AND HEARTBREAK IN CROXTETH –
What is the cause? What is the answer?

By Tony Mulhearn

The appalling murder of young Rhys Jones has generated outrage, disbelief, anger and a demand for a solution to the brutalisation of a generation of youth.
Symbolising the massive attention this tragedy has attracted, Everton footballers and supporters at the last match had a minute’s applause in sympathy with Rhys, a passionate Evertonian, and his family who attended the match. Many in the crowd were moved to tears. Everton footballers laid tributes at the murder scene.
Rhys’s murder has provoked millions of words and gallons of ink: some demanding tougher laws, others calling for tougher policing, many writing off today’s youth as a lost generation. The most reactionary solutions, ranging from forcing youth into a special army detachment to incarcerating those wearing hoods into special camps, have been voiced over the local airwaves.
As always, the reality demands a study of a situation that has developed over generations. While Rhys was gunned down in an opulent area of Croxteth, the largest private development in Western Europe containing a mix of semi-detached and expensive detached properties, it is surrounded by some of the most deprived districts in the city.
The adjacent Norris Green area has a history of youth belonging to gangs who have access to guns and drugs. A hard core tend to draw in other youth on the fringes into a life of criminality. They could be categorised as the children of Thatcher’s children. ‘There is no such thing as society’ is Thatcher’s legacy.
This area of Liverpool was once a much-desired area where working class people from the slums of downtown Liverpool that couldn’t cope with the exploding population were housed in the interwar and post-war period. Council housing with neat gardens and well-kept frontages was the rule. Work was found in the factories that lined the roads leading from the estate. Plesseys, CAV Lucas, English Electric, Bus manufacturers, and the Kirkby industrial estate, three miles up the East Lancs Road, provided work for tens of thousands.
In addition many continued to work as dockers, shipbuilders, merchant seaman and the plethora of trades connected to the thriving maritime industry, as well as finding trades in the construction, printing and the supply industries.
The policies of deindustrialisation started under a Labour government in the seventies and accelerated by Thatcher after her election in 1979 as a deliberate policy laid waste the bulk of industry. Between 1973 and 1983, when the Liverpool 47 took control of the council, 65% of manufacturing in Liverpool had been destroyed and, in spite of the titanic efforts of the 47 to create jobs and defend services for which they were surcharged and removed from office, the process has continued ever since.
The Joseph Rowntree Foundation report published in the year 2000 revealed that in parts of the Croxteth area between 50% and 70% were in poverty, and unemployment has been consistently around 36% since the 1970s. Peter Stoney, Liverpool University’s leading economist, argued that the figures were still relevant today. In a nutshell, the capitalist policies of neo-Liberalism have destroyed a whole culture.
It would be utopian to view the past through rose-coloured spectacles; sections of youth have always formed gangs, engaging in fighting to demonstrate their macho image. This activity grew or declined in intensity over the decades depending on the social and economic situation. Today, when the gap between rich and poor grows apace; when meaningful jobs have largely disappeared, when guns and drugs are attainable, a lethal cocktail exists, which directly impacts on the lives of ordinary, decent working-class people.
To paraphrase US senator Jesse Jackson, on his tour of deprived areas of Britain: ‘When jobs and a future go out the door, guns and drugs come in through the window.’
A striking feature surrounding the latest tragedy, apart from expressions of horror and sympathy with the family from the local New Labour councillor, is the absence of an intervention by the Labour movement.
Rhys’s tragic death raises in the starkest fashion the need for a fundamental change in society. It raises the need for a Socialist government which would directly address the needs of deprived areas with the same alacrity as New Labour encourages the super rich to increase their already obscene wealth or allocates billions to update weapons systems.
In 1982 when Croxteth Comprehensive School was earmarked for closure, the Liverpool Labour Party joined hands with local community activists in a campaign, which included demonstrations and marches, which assisted Labour to power in the city. In 1983 the newly elected Socialist Council, and the magnificent efforts by the local community, ensured that the school remained open as a vital facility.
New Labour in Liverpool has neither the policies, political will, organisation nor members to organise the necessary level of activity to meet the needs of working class communities.
The tragedy of Rhys’s death underlines again what is becoming clearer that a new workers’ party is vital in defending and advancing the requirements of working class communities.







Re: Horror and Heartbreak in Croxteth
Posted by: rainbow warrior (---.bb.sky.com)
Date: November 13, 2007 09:16PM

i really do understand the points that you have made in your post and agree that some sort of action needs to be taken to change the lives and attatudes of the youth of today to give them a better life tomorrow. but to be honest it dose not sit very well with me that you have used the tragic death of a young boy to high lite the need for a new workers party, it's a cheap shot and i thought you where better than that. sorry there's a gap of a few months but i'v only just sighned up to the forum

Re: Horror and Heartbreak in Croxteth
Posted by: Tony Mulhearn (---.range86-141.btcentralplus.com)
Date: November 14, 2007 06:29PM

Thanks rainbow warrior for taking the time to read my piece and to reply. I'm just a bit puzzled. Having recognised that some sort of action needs to be taken to change the lives and attitudes of youth to give them a better life tomorrow you describe my call for a new workers party as a 'cheap shot.' You don't advance any proposals yourself yet dismiss the notion of a party to represent workers in that somewhat offensive fashion.
My piece described how the absence of jobs, a future, adequate housing, all contribute to the appalling situation affecting sections of our youth. New Labour, the Tories and the Liberals represent the same wealthy class in society whose main concern is to enrich themselves. Historically the Labour party existed to advance the cause of the working class. That role is no longer fulfilled. So what is the answer? If you agree that some action has to be taken, who is going to take that action? Not the big three parties which dominate the economy.
Rhys's tragic death symbolises the desparate need for such a Party. The support of footballers, while welcome, will not alter the social and economic conditions which give rise to such tragedies. A genuine mass party of the working class would empower working class families by providing a voice and a vehicle through which their social and economic needs could be met.
I look forward to any further comments you may wish to make.

Regards

Tony

Re: Horror and Heartbreak in Croxteth
Posted by: rainbow warrior (---.bb.sky.com)
Date: November 19, 2007 10:00PM

the point i was trying to make was that you where using the death of a young boy to high lite the need for a workers party when this could be promoted on it's own values. i was not dismissing the need for a workers party,far from it as the big three have just about blured into one.
can you tell me how far down the political road the concept of a workers party is, is it just confined to the local area or is it more country wide. are you in a position to contest any of the local council seats.
to be honest i have been so fed up with the sameo sameo no real difference between the big three that i'v given pollotics a wide berth for a while i'ts been so frustrating, and i know thats not the way, but stumbling on to this site may have just relit the fire again.i am going away now to think long and hard about the other points that you have made and try to come back with some answers of my own.
regards
rainbow warrior

Re: Horror and Heartbreak in Croxteth
Posted by: Tony Mulhearn (---.range86-150.btcentralplus.com)
Date: November 20, 2007 11:52AM

Thanks rainbow warrior. I appreciate your reservations about the concept of a new workers party, we've all been let down so many times in the past. But I'm glad our exchange of views has perhaps given you food for thought and hopefully you may join our Campaign, which is a national one, to establish the kind of party we want when you have considered the idea.

Regards

Tony

Re: Horror and Heartbreak in Croxteth
Posted by: Kerry Blue (212.183.140.---)
Date: February 20, 2010 07:09PM

How do I join

Re: Horror and Heartbreak in Croxteth
Posted by: Tony Mulhearn (---.range86-141.btcentralplus.com)
Date: February 22, 2010 10:43AM

Hello Kerry Blue

Glad to hear you want to know how to join our campaign. If you email the following you will receive all the information you need:

Roy Farrar <royfarrar@blueyonder.co.uk> or ring 525 9958.

I look forward to having further discussion.

All the best

Tony



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