25/03/2020

COVID-19 is also destroying Britain's creative industries


My article for Verso Books' Blog:


How the COVID-19 pandemic is destroying Britain's creative industries

Night-slugs-lvis-1990-bok-bok-interview-


Music may be the greatest comfort, but will musicians, and the music industry, survive the year? In the midst of the unprecedented crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic, a major concern in the United Kingdom is the lack of public support for artists, freelancers and self-employed workers.
According to the Federation of Small Businesses 4.9 million British workers are self-employed, around 15% of the total workforce. These workers urgently need a support plan, one that as yet the government hasn’t offered. For now, their option is no better than to expect the £94 a week statutory sick pay.
“As a freelancer it’s always been, some months busy, some months less busy but overall it works and it’s a full wage as long as you put the hours in. I pay my taxes for a full wage, but suddenly find that 80% of wages are secured for the employed but as self-employed I am left stranded on 90 something pounds a week”, independent photographer Colin Moody told me here in Bristol. “It’s really hard and feels like we are not valued. We are supposed to act as a community right now to save this country, then we need to also support our freelancers, period.”
UNPRECEDENTED CRISIS, HIGH LEVEL OF RISKS
Music venues and festivals are cancelling events one by one. Glastonbury’s 50th anniversary plans have been axed; some estimating losses could be as high as £100 millions. Festival Republic, which puts on Reading and Leeds, Wireless, Download and Latitude, is still not sure if they will be affected, as well as All Points East in London, but the lockdown will obviously have an impact on them.
According to a statement by the Musicians’ Union:
-Musicians have lost more than £14m in earnings so far,
-90% say that their work has been affected,
-Job opportunities are down 69% compared to this time last year.
It’s not only musicians that have been affected, all sectors of the creative industries have been hit. Fifty London theatres, and 250 throughout the UK, have closed according to the Society of London Theatre (Solt) and UK Theatre, the industry body that represents them. Equity, the actors’ union, stated: “no one should be left behind just because their employment is insecure”.
The Hay literature festival, due to run 21-31 May, is cancelled; Edinburgh international film festival, to start on 17 June, won’t go ahead.
The media are as well. Pamela Morton, freelance national organiser of the National Union of Journalists, said members are “seeing work dry up and face suffering real hardship”.
THE GOVERNMENT’S RESPONSE FOR SELF-EMPLOYED IS UNFAIR AND DISHEARTENING
On Friday 20 March, the British Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak announced measures to help workers affected by COVID-19, like a better access to Universal Credit and reduction in taxes. But self-employed all over the country remain worried.
Andy Burnham, the Labour Mayor of Greater Manchester commented that: “The failure to move on support for people who are self-employed risks undermining public support for the PM’s approach. He needs to correct this ASAP.”
Bristol West MP Thangam Debbonaire wrote on Twitter: “Without a ban, pubs, theatres, concert halls, clubs etc. – huge part of economy & jobs of my constituency – can’t claim insurance and are at risk.”
 Yvette Cooper, Labour MP for Normanton, Pontefract, Castleford & Knottingley, wrote: “I’ve heard from desperate childminders, taxi drivers, construction workers, training instructors, beauticians, musicians & more who are facing serious, sudden hardship. Govt must act”.
But on 24 March, Sunak confirmed that people who were having their hours reduced would not get help, that was “not possible under the furlough scheme” he announced last week.
BRITAIN, LIKE THE USA, FAILS, WHERE EUROPE HAS ALREADY REACTED
One measure of the failure of the British government to adequately respond is by comparing these measures with those of our neighbours. In France, President Macron announced the suspension of payments of rents and energy bills. The French government is supporting workers and encouraging people to put their health first. Emmanuel Macron ignored the protests from the “gilets jaunes”, strikers against his pension reform, doctors and teachers; this month he had no choice but to stop his neoliberal reforms in front of this invisible virus.
According to Luke James, press officer for European trade unions, the current coronavirus support for the self-employed is of 80% of average wage over last 3 years in Norway, up to €1,582 per month in Belgium, €1,500 for those who lose over 70% of income in France, €203 per week for six weeks in Ireland, and €600 a month in Italy. In the United Kingdom, they are left with £94 a week…
We face an unprecedented crisis worldwide. The only reasonable response is to do whatever is possible to make this crisis change our economic models for good.
As Naomi Klein wrote in The Intercept, we must avoid another “disaster capitalism” crisis: “During moments of cataclysmic change, the previously unthinkable suddenly becomes reality.
We can look at tools to build up new plans. This crisis — like earlier ones in history — could be a catalyst to shower aid not on the wealthiest interests in society (including the ones most responsible for our current vulnerabilities and the climate emergency), but to the workers. That’s how Roosevelt’s New Deal came about, the welfare state in Europe and here the NHS.
AN APPROPRIATE RESPONSE IS JUST A FEW DECISIONS AWAY
In the UK, the level of independent workers, artists and small businesses contributing to the economy is very high. For now, they live on unions’ initiatives and community support. The Musicians’ Union is launching the a ‘Hardship Fund” of a £1 million “that members with genuine and pressing hardship can apply to” (apply now at http://theMU.org/hardshipfund)
The FSB launched a campaign and said: “Self-employed in the UK, contributing over £275bn to our economy, they need our support now more than ever.” (Details here), and petitions have also been launched (notably, here and here). But what the UK needs right now is serious a national public response.
The Labour Party is asking for more like a comprehensive income protection scheme, European-level statutory sick pay for all workers from day one, increased Universal Credit, rent suspension and a ban on evictions for six months.
The richest companies and multinationals could be taxed more, at least temporarily.  As Richard Murphy wrote last week for the Tax Justice Network: “The government can create all the money we need”, via the central bank, the Bank of England. “How does a bank create money? The honest answer is out of thin air. It happens whenever they create a loan. Most people think when they ask a bank for a loan money paid in by one person is paid on to them. That’s not true. Not true at all, in fact.”
Another urgent need might be to simply tackle the dramatic issue of tax avoidance that makes this country's public services unmanageable. Huge amount of money is stored in edge funds and tax havens, of which the largest in the world in the City of London.
This crisis is already doing what decades of campaigning didn’t succeed to do by opening people’s eyes on to the level of iniquity and inequality generated by the present system, and stopping an ever-growing industrial production. Planes are down, Alitalia, British railways and Spanish hospitals have been effectively renationalised.
Finally, universal basic income stands as the strongest response. “Universal Basic Income is an affordable and feasible response to coronavirus,” wrote economist at Balliol College, Oxford University, Daniel Susskind in the Financial Times this Monday. A “powerful case for immediate Universal Basic Income as affordable & feasible response to coronavirus,” Caroline Lucas commented on Twitter. “Handing out £1000 per person per month would cost £66bn a month – a fraction of nearly £500bn bailout during 2008 financial crisis,” Susskind added.
Later on, we will have to reinvent our system of production, not only to face a higher number of pandemic but also because our planet cannot cope with our system ecologically. More than ever we need to look for better solutions, and learn from our general mistakes.
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Melissa Chemam is a writer, broadcast journalist and author. She has been based in the USA, France, the UK and East Africa for the BBC World Service, Reuters, CBC, DW, etc. She spent most of her carrier as a freelance reporter or on short-term contracts. She was also the main researcher for Award-winning director Raoul Peck’s film The Young Karl Marx, released in 2019 (https://www.bl.uk/events/karl-marx-imagined-and-the-young-karl-marx-screening), and a speaker at the political festival Bristol Transformed in 2019 and 2020.
She's aslo the author of a book on Bristol's music and art scene, centred on the story of Massive Attack: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Massive-Attack-Out-Comfort-Zone-ebook/dp/B07P5PF8RJ/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1580774028&sr=1-1 
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No pay rise for Bristol City Council!!! Help volunteers instead - Petition


This morning I learned that Bristol City Council voted last week to give its own mayor and councillors a pay rise...

In this times of health crisis, citizens highly disagree!!

I launched this petition: 

Make Bristol City Council use their coming pay rise for the NHS and the homeless!!







This week was revealed that Bristol City Council voted last week for a pay rise for the mayor and councillors - despite pay freeze for all directors - and the postponement of the local elections.
It's to come into effect in May. It's worth £180 000 per year

But meanwhile they ask us to volunteer to help the NHS and find shelter for the homeless?
I'd happily do that but I want my fellow taxpayers' money to be used for NHS salaries and charities! Not the councillors currently working from home on laptops!!
Let's ask the city council to use these £180 000 for the homeless charity or the NHS workers! 
Here are details:
24 MAR 2020, Bristol Live
Bristol city councillors have voted through a pay rise for themselves which will cost council tax payers an extra £180,000 a year, while freezing the salaries of top officers.
The increases include £9,000 a year for the elected mayor Marvin Rees, £5,500 for deputy mayors Craig Cheney and Asher Craig and £3,500 for the seven other cabinet members, along with a rise of about £1,000 in the basic allowance for all 70 members.
They were supposed to be delayed until after the local elections – originally scheduled for May but postponed by 12 months because of the coronavirus pandemic – to give some “distance” between the councillors approving them and those receiving them.
But lord mayor Jos Clark confirmed at a full council meeting of Bristol City Council on Tuesday, March 17, that all the changes would come into force this coming May.
The rises for the deputy mayors and cabinet members were recommended by an independent remuneration panel and voted through unanimously at the meeting with no debate last week.
At a full council meeting last September, councillors voted in favour of the panel’s advice to increase the mayor of Bristol’s salary by 12.6 per cent, from £70,605 to £79,468 to match that of an MP, which would have also come into force after the local elections.

Full council chair Cllr Clark said at last Tuesday’s meeting: “Obviously the mayoral elections are no longer taking place, however the recommendations would come into force in May 2020.”
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Sign here and share:

23/03/2020

#AloneTogether


Because we need to start rethinking our world now, and especially the way we produce and structure our economy: 



Extinction Rebellion UK launches AloneTogether – a Regenerative Rebellion as part of the response to coronavirus

Extinction Rebellion UK launches AloneTogether – a Regenerative Rebellion as part of the response to coronavirus
This is a world-changing moment. As coronavirus takes hold of our day to day lives, the way we organise and support each other will change. We will lose much we hold dear.
This calls for an evolution – not a shelving – of our rebellion. This is a time to remember what we are rebelling for – a thriving and just world of regenerative cultures that can weather crises, foster cooperation and look after each other on a global scale. 
That is why today, as part of the response to coronavirus, Extinction Rebellion UK is offering AloneTogether, a Regenerative Rebellion built around:
  • Personal / community wellbeing and resiliencemutual aid, care and outreach
    • Thousands are mobilising – including many from Extinction Rebellion – to meet the coronavirus crisis in communities with compassion  and creativity. That’s why today Extinction Rebellion is launching a new Handbook online (PDF) with a growing range of regenerative resources for personal and community resilience, plus 1-2-1 support options, wellbeing tips, a programme of online events and ways to share and connect. [1] 
  • Tell the truth
    • Our 2020 strategy is about highlighting deep systemic problems in our democracy, media and economy. [2] This is not a time for silence, nor to give business as usual free reign. With sensitivity and determination, we will continue to demand that the truth is told to ensure that business as usual doesn’t use this crisis for its own benefit. 
    • When there are shocks in society, governments – captured by vested interests – have been known to use emergencies to make toxic policy changes and erode democracy. We cannot allow the few to use this as an opportunity to cash in or bury bad news. Too much is at stake. We encourage anyone with information unknown to the public to visit our whistle-blower gateway TruthTeller.Life
  • Actions and mobilisation
    • In the coming months, the actions we take – and the stories we tell through those actions – will need to respond to the crisis we’re in with empathy, while continuing to find creative and compelling ways to critique our fragile human systems, and vision alternatives. For guidelines for designing actions during the pandemic, including re-thinking NVDA, please read these guidelines.
  • Community democracy
    • From the local to the global, Extinction Rebellion will be supporting ways for people to come together and make decisions. This includes training for those working at a local level; while calling for a Global Citizens Assembly to focus on systemic issues.
We are living through an emergency response that shows us things can be done differently. The possibility is opening up to make the necessary and urgent changes to respond to the intersecting global crises – financial, health, climate and ecological – creating a world where life can thrive.
We can be part of this emergency response, holding to our goals, demands and strategy.
We are still connected. We are AloneTogether.
Doctors for Extinction Rebellion said in a statement: “We all have a responsibility to do what we can to reduce the spread of this disease and to support ourselves and our communities through physical isolation and distancing. Whilst quarantine and isolation measures are incredibly important for all of our sakes, we urge people to stay connected through online meetings, chats, games and exercise in nature. 
“Look after yourself, your friends, family, elders and those around you and follow current medical guidelines. We know you care and want to continue mobilising around the climate and ecological emergency; that momentum within the movement has been growing and the desire to look after planetary health in the global community is strongly felt.”
Debbie Winton from Extinction Rebellion UK’s Regenerative Cultures said: “We have seen the immediate response of people to this crisis, assisting one another, engaging in mutual aid and community building initiatives. 
“We would like to support and encourage efforts as we move forward, sharing resources to help people look after themselves and others. Although in isolation, we will face this together.”

Covid 19 health crisis - advice and news on Twitter


Just a short one to say I keep on working at UWE and BIMM as an associate lecturer in journalism, but as it's getting harder to report en interview people outdoors, I'm also monitoring the most informative pieces of news regarding the current Covid 19 health crisis on Twitter:

Melissa Chemam
@melissachemam
*Freelance Journalist on migrations/UK/EU/Africa/politics... *Writer on music/art *Author of a book on Massive Attack & Bristol *Journalism lecturer *Researcher
Bristol/Barbès/Beyond

My sister work as a doctor in France and I monitor different sources in the two languages.

Hope this can help!
All the best to you all. 


20/03/2020

Karmacoma @ 25


Happy birthday gorgeous, generational, unforgettable song!

Released on 20 March 1995 as a single with this cover, drawn by Massive Attack's co-founder, rapper, lyricist and artist 3D Del  Naja:





Here is the official music video:

Massive Attack - 'Karmacoma'




A few words from my book - chapter 7:


‘Karmacoma’: Jamaica ‘n’ Roma

One of the defining moments of the album’s composition came with a song that 3D and Tricky wrote. ‘Karmacoma’ became the album’s second track and third single. Based on a rap between the two voices, an Indian rhythm and the sample from the Insects, ‘Karmacoma’ has a very oriental feel, coming from the use of other samples from Russian and various type of Asian music.

The chorus samples Alexander Borodin’s opera, Prince Igor,
specifically an extract from the ‘Polovtsian Dances’ in the second act. Another sample comes from a piece of Mongolian diphonic throat singing called a “Khoomei”, of its harmonic part, used in ‘Dream Time in Lake Jackson’ by British acid house band the KLF on their album Chill Out. The rhythm of the ‘Karmacoma’ introduction comes from the beginning of an Indian song named ‘Aaja Sajan Aaja’, sung by Alka Yagnik and written for the Bollywood film Khal Nayak, in 1993. These Eastern inspirations would grow with Massive Attack’s first visit to  Istanbul in 1996 during a world tour… The song’s bassline also samples a section of French singer Serge Gainsbourg’s song ‘Melody’, from his concept album Histoire de Melody Nelson, released in 1971.

Already, ‘Karmacoma’ brought a new direction to the album,
different from the songs written with Tracey Thorn. Intriguing and
mysterious both in its sound and its lyrics, the track is a play on word on 3D and Tricky’s origins, from Italy and Jamaica. And their cohabitation was more of a continuous effect of their personality clash than a smooth endeavour.

(...)

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More in my book: Massive Attack: Out Of The Comfort Zone



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Other versions:


'Karmacoma' (Unkle Situation)





'Karmacoma' (Portishead Experience)



'Bumber Ball Dub' (by Mad Professor)


'Karmacoma' (The Napoli Trip)






Love in the Time of Corona



I'm writing, following the current developments of the coronavirus as all journalists do, and here in Bristol a major concern is the lack of government's support for freelancers, artists and above all the most vulnerable.

It seems obvious that Boris Johnson's government doesn't impose closure on purpose, to avoid taking the responsibility. Then the British Prime Minister claims the UK's economy is robust and won't be affected!  

A local MP, Thangam Debbonaire, wrote about it on Twitter:

"Without a ban, pubs, theatres, concert halls, clubs etc. - huge part of economy & jobs of my constituency - can't claim insurance and are at risk. Just telling people not to go doesn't help. I've written to Chancellor and Sec. of State for Business to ask them to sort this. The musicians, technicians, bar staff, door staff, cooks, waiting staff and more people whose jobs depend on these industries are all at risk and as they are often self-employed or on zero hours they may struggle quickly." 

In comparison, in France, where I spent years, President Macron announced reinforced confinement, so that people don't have to go to work, and the suspension of payments of rents and energy bills. 
The French government is supporting workers and encouraging people to put their health first. It's obviously very different in Johnson's Britain.

But we face an unprecedented crisis! 

Hopefully, this crisis will change politics and our economic models for good.

As Naomi Klein wrote, for now, we face another "disaster" crisis but we are also given tools to build up new plans.

For Emmanuel Macron, this crisis comes at the most inconvenient time... He's ignored the "gilets jaunes" for months, defied the strikers again his pension reform and forced a government's vote despite the parliament. But he is not stopped in his neoliberal reform movement by an invisible virus.

Yet, British people are facing way worse. 

Could anyone come up with more plans?

I'm in touch (in person but also electronically) with a lot of musicians, doctors, and workers in vulnerable positions, on both side of the Channel, worrying about this and trying to find answers.

One of the necessary, vital ideas might simply be to reconsider Brexit. If ever a vaccine comes from the EU, firstly. But also, if we need to import more necessary goods.

Another urgent need might be to simply tackle the dramatic issue of tax avoidance that makes this country's public services unmanageable in a time of crisis. 

If you have a contribution to make, please follow up, comment or contact me.

Stay strong and take care of each other.



17/03/2020

Disaster Capitalism — and How to Beat It, by Naomi Klein


Must watch:

by Naomi Klein for The Intercept:


'Coronavirus Capitalism — and How to Beat It'





Governments around the world are busily exploiting the coronavirus crisis to push for no-strings-attached corporate bailouts and regulatory rollbacks. “I've spent two decades studying the transformations that take place under the cover of disaster,” writes Naomi Klein. “I’ve learned that one thing we can count on is this: During moments of cataclysmic change, the previously unthinkable suddenly becomes reality.” In recent decades, that change has mainly been for the worst — but this has not always been the case. And it need not continue to be in the future. This video is about the ways the still-unfolding Covid-19 crisis is already remaking our sense of the possible. The Trump administration and other governments around the world are busily exploiting the crisis to push for no-strings-attached corporate bailouts and regulatory rollbacks. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is moving to repeal financial regulations that were introduced after the last major financial meltdown, as part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act. China, for its part, is indicating that it will relax environmental standards to stimulate its economy, which would wipe out the one major benefit the crisis has produced so far: a marked drop in that country’s lethal air pollution. But this is not the whole story. In the United States, we have also seen organizing at the city and state levels win important victories to suspend evictions during the pandemic. Ireland has announced six weeks of emergency unemployment payments for all workers who suddenly find themselves out of work, including self-employed workers. And despite U.S. presidential candidate Joe Biden’s claims during the recent debate that the pandemic has nothing to do with Medicare for All, many Americans are suddenly realizing that the absence of a functioning safety net exacerbates vulnerabilities to the virus on many fronts. This crisis — like earlier ones — could well be the catalyst to shower aid on the wealthiest interests in society, including those most responsible for our current vulnerabilities, while offering next to nothing to the most workers, wiping out small family savings and shuttering small businesses. But as this video shows, many are already pushing back — and that story hasn’t been written yet.



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