What a bloody marvellous moment it was yesterday to log onto
Twitter to be greeted by tweet after tweet celebrating ‘He Ain’t Heavy’ making
it the Christmas number one slot. I guess there must have been millions like me
who have never had the remotest interest in who occupies the festive top slot
suddenly becoming fully engaged in the whole thing. When I downloaded my copy I
was fairly sure that it was the first time I had ever made such a purchase and
then I remembered Band Aid all those years ago.
Two records.
Two desperate
memories from the Eighties.
One I watched unfold
on the TV as Michael Burke revealed the extent of the human catastrophe in the
Horn of Africa. And one I was very much a part of.
What do the two events have in common? On the surface of
this not a great deal. The loss of 96 football supporters thanks to the
incompetence and arrogance of a police force that had been allowed to become a
law unto itself was a tragedy the likes of which we have seldom seen on these
shores. Let us never forget that the actions of the South Yorkshire police that
day accounted for eight times as many fatalities as the Bloody Sunday Massacre,
four times as many as the Real IRA killed with the Omagh bomb in 1998, and
almost twice the death toll Al Queda achieved in London on 7/7.
And people used to wonder why we wouldn’t give up on our
demands for justice...
However the situation in Ethiopia all those years ago was a
whole different ball game. It wasn’t the lives of 96 that were at threat: it
was the lives of millions.
So what do the two events have in common other than the
strange 80’s feel to the old news footage?
Well, plenty.
The famine in Ethiopia was primarily caused by a
drought just like the catastrophe on the Leppings Lane end was largely down to
cages and a shamefully dilapidated stadium that wasn’t up to the job. The real
question was how these problems were allowed to turn into tragedies and why the
tragedies were so appallingly handled. Why couldn’t the Ethiopian government
get emergency relief to its own people? Because for years it had been tearing
itself to shreds in endless civil war. And like many civil wars from those
dimly remembered times, it was also a part of the Cold war. The West backed one side
whilst the Soviets backed another. The Cold War Warriors in the White House and
the Kremlin shipped millions of dollars and roubles worth of weaponry into the
meat grinder and nobody cared much about the civilians stuck in the middle of
it all. So when the rains never came and the earth turned to dust nobody either
cared or noticed: they were all too busy fighting their ideological games.
And then Michael Burke turned up with his camera and the
world sat up and noticed. A record was made and we went out and bought it and
it made the Christmas number one slot and the politicians were forced to look beyond their death games.
The South Yorkshire police
were also born out of ideology. In the early Eighties they were given a free
hand and overtime by the truckload to beat the living daylights out of the
striking miners. A blind eye was turned by the media and politicians alike as the
Conservatives exacted their revenge for the downfall of the Heath government in
1974. For a while policemen in South Yorkshire
were allowed to do anything they liked and there were never any consequences:
merely a pat on the back, a round of drinks, endless jokes about kicking the
shit out of the lads on the picket lines. And so when they were given the job
of ensuring 50,000 citizens of Great
Britain could watch a football match in
safety they completely blew it because they had been allowed to completely
forget that it was their job to serve the public. They had become accustomed to
their special status. They were Maggie Thatcher’s very own Republican Guard.
Looking after people was beneath their dignity. Just like the dictators at the
helm in Ethiopia
considered feeding their people to be beneath their dignity.
What is truly heartening in both tragedies is how the public
can react when we are finally given the truth. Before the Michael Burke film we
didn’t do anything about the kids starving in Ethiopia
because we didn’t know there were
kids starving in Ethiopia .
Similarly for 23 years the vast majority of the British Public dismissed the
claims of those of us who lived through that afternoon on the Leppings Lane
because they were completely brainwashed to dismiss our claims. But once the
curtain of lies and cover up was at last ripped down the public have come
through in spades. If only we could be told the truth more often, our world
would be a much better place.
Over last few years we Liverpool
fans have learned that people power can actually work. We used every tool in
the new media box to get rid of Hicks and Gillet and then honed those same skills to
force Parliament to finally have an open debate on what really happened on 15
April 1989.
Maybe times are changing and changing fast. Let’s not forget
that it was partly down to Joey Barton and his legendary Twitter following that
we were able to force the doors of Westminster .
The fact that a lad like Joey was able to rattle cage of the Establishment is
surely evidence that we might be about to enter something of a Brave New World.
Just look at how those arrogant pricks at the helm of Starbucks
are hopping about like scalded cats now that millions of us have decided to buy
our Cappuccino elsewhere. They thought they could treat us all with disdain and
that we were too stupid to do anything about it. Well think again you greedy
bastards, because if we choose not to buy from you then you have nothing except
a worthless, tarnished brand that has become toxic. That ultimate example of
human pondlife Kelvin McKenzie thought he was a master of the universe. He
thought it was his divine right to spout his poison on Question Time and there
wasn’t a thing we could do about it. Well think again Kelvin. I reckon Tranmere
will win the Premiership before you get on Question Time again.
Here is where there might be more to ‘He ain’t heavy’ than
meets the eye. Maybe it is yet another example of how we can all find ways of
doing stuff together to kick down the walls of the Establishment and get the
truth and justice we crave.
For years Governments of all colours successfully spun the
line that the IRA were nothing more than common criminals: murderous thugs who
commanded hardly any public support at all. Then a young lad called Bobby Sands went on
hunger strike and before he starved himself to death he stood for Parliament.
On 9 April 1981, 30,493 people voted for him and for a few weeks he was the
youngest MP in the House. Everything changed that day. You simply can’t spin
the 'common criminals with no support' line when 30,493 people turn out to vote
for one of those common criminals. Thatcher had the rug yanked from under her
feet. She was forced to start talking instead of sending out her beloved SAS
execution squads and seventeen years later there was peace after 300 years of
war.
Every last copy of ‘He Ain’t Heavy’ represents a clear
message to the Establishment. Don’t you dare assume that your nasty little
cover ups will hold forever. Sure you got away with it for 23 years and my how
you must have laughed at us as we beat away at the doors. But the last laugh is
ours. The time has come for the bill to be settled and all of a sudden you have
nowhere to hide any more.
There is a great deal of talk about the dominant hold the
new celebrity culture has over 2012 Britain . The X Factor stands at the
epicentre of this tawdry state of affairs. The X Factor overlords no doubt considered the
Christmas number one slot to be their divine right just like the South
Yorkshire Police were utterly certain that their cover up would stay in place.
Well think again. A whole bunch of bothersome Scousers has just bucked the
trend. In fact Scousers have a pretty decent track record when it comes to
using music to get people to look at the world in a different way. Once upon a
time a Scouser wrote the following lyrics.
Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
And did anyone listen? You bet they did. They named an
airport after him.
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