My Kingdom for a Time Machine
The left should revisit the good old days of the feminist collective.
So says the Guardian’s Julie Bindel.
Our fearless scribe is pining for the days of “anti-hierarchical collective working” in the twilight of the Seventies. When, coincidentally, she was young. “In many ways collective working was successful,” says she, though the basis for this claim is somewhat sketchy, beyond a further claim that “eminent professionals” and “working class women” bathed in mutual respect and “recognised we could learn from each other.” Ms Bindel’s attempt to persuade us of the virtues of feminist collectives is, however, derailed by sharing her memories of actually being in one:
I recall a collective meeting about setting up a weekly telephone support service for lesbians. It was decided that each collective member would volunteer to take turns manning the phones at their own home, until we could raise the money to rent a space. One of the members did not have a telephone in her house, but insisted she was being discriminated against and “oppressed” by being left out of the rota.
Some difficulties involved scheduling conflicts:
Whenever the media wanted a quote from a feminist organisation, the collectives always missed out in favour of those with a hierarchical structure. All decisions had to be made by consensus, so if the journalist’s deadline was the next day, it was no use explaining that our next meeting was a week on Thursday.
The list of problems does in fact take up quite a lot of the article:
Sitting in endless meetings, unable to reach agreements, and taking days to produce one leaflet because someone objected to the word seminal.
Perhaps sensing that her sales pitch is faltering somewhat, Ms Bindel stresses the immense radicalism of it all:
There was a total resistance to the cult of the individual… until the Thatcher government declared war on society.
What, you didn’t know?
Collective living was also encouraged. Unlike today, when most of us, gay or straight, seem to be railroaded into monogamous coupledom and marriage, back in the day we often lived in groups, bonded by our political activism and vision, raising each other’s children and sharing tasks and late-night discussions.
Imagine the fun. Lasting for decades.
The shortcomings of collective parenting and “raising each other’s children” were of course touched on recently following an equally nostalgic piece by fellow Guardianista Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett. During the subsequent discussion, we wondered how many former commune enthusiasts are still intimately “bonded” with their one-time housemates, the people to whom they entrusted the raising of their children.
Despite her struggle to convince, caused chiefly by recalling what the “good old days of the feminist collective” did in fact entail, Ms Bindel ends on a bold and defiant note:
In these times of neoliberalism, working collectively could signal a new way forward. For the fractured left, it is increasingly obvious and important that we need to forge new alliances in order to defeat the march of uber-capitalism.
Readers with a taste for “anti-hierarchical collective working” and “defeating uber-capitalism” may benefit from watching Vanessa Engle’s excellent documentary series Lefties, particularly the second episode, titled Angry Wimmin, which follows the adventures and frustrations of the ladies involved in such endeavours. And in which, incidentally, Ms Bindel can be seen insisting that heterosexual feminists are a contradiction in terms and that lesbianism is an ideological duty. You see, any woman can be a lesbian if she just tries hard enough and embraces the right kind of politics. Given her intense political commitment, one presumes that Ms Bindel would have selflessly facilitated any such transformation. When she was young.
They argued for days about “seminal” but had no trouble with manning the telephones? Peak stupid draws ever closer.
Ms Bindel’s attempt to persuade us of the virtues of feminist collectives is, however, derailed by sharing her memories of actually being in one
Snork. Button pushed.
“…the cult of the individual”.
Wow- I am a similar age to Ms. Bindel and there was I thinking that I grew up perfectly boring and straight and normal and it turns out that all this time I’ve been a member of a cult, for Christ’s sake.
Mother, father- you have a lot to answer for. I always knew there was something slightly off-kilter with the whole bungalow/colour telly/candlewick bedspreads/Flymo/Austin Maxi deal.
candlewick bedspreads
Where did they go to?
Mrs J also had a candlewick dressing gown, when we married.
it turns out that all this time I’ve been a member of a cult
Yes, it’s a lot to take in. What with “the march of uber-capitalism,” Mrs Thatcher’s “war on society,” and the “railroading” of gay people into marriage and coupledom. I’m still not sure who’s doing the railroading. Those evil capitalists, presumably.
Thanks for the link to Lefties – I watched a bit of it; absolutely fascinating.
Thanks for the link to Lefties – I watched a bit of it; absolutely fascinating.
It’s well worth watching in full.
raising each other’s children and sharing tasks and late-night discussions.
I wonder at what time the following morning the household would commence these tasks? And whether the children were up before the adults.
Today’s insanity:
http://trib.al/b81S4z4
Isn’t wonderful that in our neo-liberal society they can go off and have as much fun in their collectives as they want, secure in the knowledge that we’re quite happy for them to get on with it.
What’s that, they want us to pay for it as well? Who’d a thunk it.
Today’s insanity
Sometimes you realise that prolonged exposure to the Guardian is actually quite wearying. Like you’ve just lost several pints of blood.
Today’s insanity
Clearly the answer is to ban Australian aboriginals from eating at the big M as they are obviously incapable of restraining themselves.
pining for the days of “anti-hierarchical collective working” in the twilight of the Seventies.
Things from the Seventies that were actually any good:
(1) Meeting the wife.
(2) Curly Wurly.
…
That’s about it.
To the phones! Oh right. I saw “Reds”. Nostalgia for endless unproductive meetings with other committed leftists? Never mind in the end, it didn’t work in the beginning either. Quibbling over a single word is what they do most successfully.
That’s about it.
Oh, I dunno. In 1979 a school friend’s older brother made me a tape of The Human League, which struck young me as the coolest band ever.
What?
a weekly telephone support service for lesbians
What sort of lesbian-specific support, pray tell, might be needed on a weekly basis?
“manning the phones”..?
David, I think a trigger warning is in order here.
Today’s Insanity
I’ll see your insanity and raise you one – for equality in the collective if male feminists are allowed in.
JuliaM – one of those “indigenous children” doesn’t have much of a sun tan!
Maybe she spends all her time indoors eating junk food.
Another of the children featured in the exhibition, Luka, is weighed down by the coke cans strapped to her slight body. In the accompanying image, she holds a “number 7” boomerang, the most deadly of all boomerangs.
The Number 7 is deadly because it’s dipped in dog doo and broken glass.
For viewers, these contradictory images should be deeply challenging, Schwartz says.
They aren’t.
“It looks at the universal simplicity and sweetness and positivity of children,
This woman obviously doesn’t have children. They’re little bastards. Just yesterday, I caught one of mine shovelling cat litter into his mouth. While I was cleaning out his mouth (and trying not to dry heave), he kicked me square in the nuts.
and lays before us what will become of their lives,” she said. “It is uncomfortable, because we are all agents in that future.”
No we’re not. I’m not giving any Maccy D’s to Aborigines.
In her treatise accompanying the exhibition, the chair of Indigenous studies at the University of Melbourne, Professor Marcia Langton, says the potential of the children has been lost. For children like Sterling, his “socialisation is bereft of traditions such as hunting and bereft of the vast knowledge of his traditional estate, environments, fauna and flora, his rightful patrimony”, she writes.
This is the most racist thing I’ve read in a while. So Professor Marcia thinks Aborigines should be running about half-naked, eating kangaroos and flinging poo-encrusted boomerangs at people.
Aunty Kerrie Doyle, an associate professor of Indigenous Health at RMIT University, described Thornton’s exhibition as courageous.
So brave!
In 2013, Doyle became the first Indigenous Australian woman to graduate from Oxford University, with a master’s of science in evidence-based social intervention.
So indigenous!
“People tell them to give their children two pieces of fruit each day, but if an orange costs $5 and you have four children, that’s half your pension packet gone.
She claims oranges cost $5 each in remote Western Australia. I’ve no idea if this is true or not, and since she’s a blue-eyed, white-skinned ‘aborigine’ I’m not inclined to take her word for it.
But suppose it’s true? The only alternative is a Big Mac meal?
Pull the other one, Dame Edna.
“anti-hierarchical collective working”
Ten people have an hour-long meeting to see who’s doing the washing-up. #SocialistEfficiency
If it’s true that the water from the taps is not safe then that is a bona fide problem. but it is one where the solution is to fix the water delivery/storage system; it has nothing to do with junk food.
To make health food you need electricity, you need cooking facilities, you need water supply. It’s just a tragedy that in some communities they don’t even have access to safe drinking water, which would be unacceptable in any suburb of Sydney or Melbourne
Again, this is true, and again, if these remote communities don’t have reliable electricity supplies then efforts should be made to provide them with one. Even Rathlin is on the mains now.
But providing electricity and safe drinking water, the actual solutions to these problems, seems to have little to do — indeed to almost be antithetical to — the weid obsession with hunting and traditional lifestyles. Surely the traditional lifestyle of hunting didn’t involve much in the way of electricity? Or properly treated water?
In fact it seems like the problem isn’t that Bad Modern Life has displaced Good Traditional Ways so much as that they don’t have enough of the distinctive features of Modern Life (clean water, electricity) and so need more Modern Life, not less.
She claims oranges cost $5 each in remote Western Australia. I’ve no idea if this is true or not, and since she’s a blue-eyed, white-skinned ‘aborigine’ I’m not inclined to take her word for it.
A quick trip to Mr. Google shows that one can get a 380 gm (13.4 ounce) navel orange from Cole’s in Perth for a whopping $0.61 AUD, or $0.75 AUD at Woolworth’s. I am guessing “evidence-based” means something other than based on actual evidence in the “social intervention” arena, whatever that is.
So Professor Marcia thinks Aborigines should be running about half-naked, eating kangaroos and flinging poo-encrusted boomerangs at people.
No, I don’t think you’re understanding. The “progressive” belief is that EVERYONE should be running about half-naked, eating kangaroos and flinging poo-encrusted boomerangs at people…well, everyone in Oz that is. Your kangaroo may vary. So see? Not racist. Not a smidgen.
Ms Bindel insists on purity:

What this hag is really remembering is how much fun it was to be young in the 70s. I miss it too, but I didn’t fall for the collective thing…. ever … I was taught to go and earn a living, all by myself … Ask Ayn Rand about collectives.
There is no pride in the work of a collective. It is so diluted by the time it’s over with that it was not worth the time in the first place. The individual gets things done in a pragmatic way that leaves the collective in the dust …
A motorcycle moves faster and more gracefully than a bus.
Gosh, it’s almost as if hierarchical orginizational structures evolved for a reason.
Ah, so it’s a joke piece. Got it.
Ah, so it’s a joke piece. Got it.
Reading it, you have to continually step over things like “the cult of the individual,” “neoliberalism,” “the march of uber-capitalism” – words and phrases that tell you nothing about the world but quite a bit about the writer.
“someone objected to the word seminal.”
I recall a risibly PC man who made a practice of always using ‘ovular’ instead of ‘seminal’.”
“What sort of lesbian-specific support, pray tell, might be needed on a weekly basis?”
A man looked at me!
“we wondered how many former commune enthusiasts are still intimately “bonded” with their one-time housemates”
Some pretty intimate bonding here – you wonder how the Guardian haven’t shoved this in the memory hole
http://www.theguardian.com/theguardian/1999/oct/08/features11.g21
Wait, I thought your sexuality was down to genes? But if lesbianism is a *duty*, doesn’t that mean all those attempts to “cure” people of being homosexuals etc were on to something?
Clearly I need to enrol in another Maintaining Cognitive Dissonance course…
An Anarcho-Syndicalist Collective?
Paging Dennis the Peasant…
Today’s Insanity, Part 2. Via Instapundit.
“his ‘socialisation is bereft of traditions such as hunting and bereft of the vast knowledge of his traditional estate, environments, fauna and flora, his rightful patrimony’ “
I, too, have been denied my rightful patrimony. Nobody ever taught me the folkways of my ancestors, which included periodically invading Rome to rape, loot, pillage and burn. Racism!
Farnsworth M Muldoon – A quick trip to Mr. Google shows that one can get a 380 gm (13.4 ounce) navel orange from Cole’s in Perth for a whopping $0.61 AUD, or $0.75 AUD at Woolworth’s
Yes. I can imagine there’s some markup by the time oranges reach truly remote Aborigine communities – for the same reasons an orange might cost you a bit more from the only-shop-cum-post-office on a small Hebridean island – but $5 per orange seems a bit unlikely.
But what to believe? Logic? Or a Rachel Dolezal wannabe ‘Aborigine’ who’s too lazy to even get a fake tan?
Though, by the looks of her, she doesn’t eat a lot of fresh fruit or vegetables herself. Maybe her Number 7 boomerang only catches kebabs.
wtp – Quite right. I forgot environmentalism.
On this whole orange thing, how do you get into the situation where you’re supporting 4 children on a pension packet? If that’s a common problem, sod the $5 oranges, frankly, and look at basic maths and birth control.
Well, I’ve watched the first episode of Lefties. Fascinating stuff. Some of them came over as complete twerps, such as the Dutchman Pim and Piers Corbyn (Jeremy’s brother, not that that’s strictly relevant) but some of them were impressive: thoughtful and self-aware and with a sense of proportion. I enjoyed the slight sheepishness of the one who became the Americas Editor of the Economist. One couldn’t imagine them demanding that one check one’s privilege, or being triggered by a literary reference. But then they weren’t pandered to by the powers-that-were, so they actually had to stand up for what they believed in. Overall their responses to the issues of the time were not necessarily daft, and in some things they’ve been proved right – property demolition, for example.
Here’s a piece by Nick Cohen written when Lefties was first shown. http://www.newstatesman.com/node/152398
“There was a total resistance to the cult of the individual”
Yet her own article disproves this – people endlessly arguing over the word ‘seminal’, someone claiming discrimination because they didn’t own a telephone – the whole thing was one long pointless soap opera of clashing individual personalities, each vying with the others in an arms race of “I’m more radical than you’.
And yet despite nearly half a decade of this nonsense these people are still taken seriously.
“In 2013, Doyle became the first Indigenous Australian woman to graduate from Oxford University, with a master’s of science in evidence-based social intervention.”
Evidence-based social intervention, eh? I like the fact that it is an MSc. Oxford University has declined somewhat since the days I didn’t attend it if it is doling out junk Master of Science degrees like this.
I feel like my own MSc has been devalued simply by reading that. I am hurt. Bereft, in fact.
…but $5 per orange seems a bit unlikely.
Indeed, and I had considered there might be some markup, OTOH, I live in East Sasquatch USandA and can get a Hawaiian pineapple cheaper at the Piggly Wiggly than I could in the grocery on Oahu.
Regarding Ms. Doyle, perhaps she is related to Elizabeth Warren, or merely misspelled Arboriginal meaning she eats entire trees.
Rob – in the days when I didn’t attend Oxford, it was apparently full of immaculately dressed eccentric toffs who carried teddy bears named after Jesuit saints around with them.
I fear it has declined since then.
What would Inspector Morse say if he was still alive? “Lewis!” I expect.
If only the similarly pasty white girls of Rotherham had had the wit and circumstances to hold up a crude cardboard sign like that. Things could have been so different.
It isn’t, of course, cardboard. Sorry.
Well, I’ve watched the first episode of Lefties. Fascinating stuff.
I’m not sure I’d be quite so generous about the participants – most of them, anyway – but, yes, it’s an excellent series. A companion series aired around the same, titled Tory! Tory! Tory!, is also well worth watching:
Part one.
Part two.
Part three.
I fear it has declined since then.
A voice, yes, and it was saying, “Help me find my car keys and we’ll drive out”.
I know, old and terrible. I denounce myself.
Ironic that the oh so hip Guardian prints an article about an old bird banging on about how much better it was in the old days.
I need feminism because my vagina has a voice
And I need pus….never mind.
Farnsworth M Muldoon – assuming her $5 oranges are real, what would that tell us?
It’d tell us that Aborigines don’t want oranges. That would be the only plausible explanation for that sort of price for such a cheap and commonplace commodity item.
So… say you run a small shop in an Aboriginal settlement – somewhere really remote, like Bidyadanga. Shelf space is limited. The locals overwhelmingly want carbohydrate snacks and processed junk food. Only a few people care to buy oranges from you, and they’re perishable, so you charge $5 a pop for the handful of oranges you get in every week.
That’s the only explanation that doesn’t involve her lying that makes sense. Otherwise some enterprising local would make a weekly 4 hour round trip to Broome to pick up a few bags of oranges and undercut the local shop while still retaining a fat profit.
merely misspelled Arboriginal meaning she eats entire trees.
That is very cruel. 🙂
Bidyadanga, AKA, La Grange. Learn something new every day.
That’s the only explanation that doesn’t involve her lying that makes sense.
I take your point – the nearest Piggly Wiggly is bleak but not that bleak.
I fear it has declined since then.
I am ashamed to have to point out that that background is not Oxford.