Dazza
New Member
Hiya - I wonder if this is part of the problem.
I'm not going to get into an 'is he racist?' thing because on balance I don't think he is. I think Morrissey is a contrarian and supports the underdog at such things, hence he was 'left wing' in 80s Thatcher Britain and supports 'silent majority' outfits like UKIP and For Britain now. For what it's worth I think that Anne Marie Waters is a strange piece of work and I can't see the appeal, but Moz is welcome to support whoever he likes.
That said...I remember a quote from Billy Bragg to the effect of "I don't think Morrissey ever figured his politics out" and I think there's something in that.
People tend to fall into one of three camps politically in my experience:-
1) either conventional left (socially liberal, economically statist) or conventional right (other way round)
2) purist - so either individualist or statist on pretty much everything (I'm a classical liberal, so broadly individualist)
3) a bit all over the place, pick and mix
You get the feeling Moz is in camp 3 - he isn't a socialist, can't be called a conservative (his hatred of Thatcher nails that) and you can't see him as a Gladstonian liberal or anything like that. I'm surprised in some ways as you'd expect a man of his intelligence to reach some sort of conventional worldview, but perhaps as Billy says he is still figuring it out.
Morrissey is free market on some points and statist on others, socially liberal on some things yet almost reactionary on others. He pines for a romantic sense of English greatness and speaks highly of certain nationalist causes, yet surprises us with other thoughts on other subjects.
Is Morrissey some sort of far right loon? I honestly don't think so - and those fans who have ditched him over the accusation need to give their heads a wobble.
The assumption was that he was always a lefty - and the discovery that he's a 'pick and mix' guy has come as a shock to many. Ok that I get...you could understand him going full on Tory due to accumulated wealth or coming out as some sort of Libertarian/anarchist.
In the context of 'I've no idea what he stands for' I can perhaps get the disappointment - I don't know either, but he reminds me of so many people I grew up with who were all over the place and didn't seem to formulate a clear worldview on the old 'collective vs individual' question. That I think is the important one.
Perhaps Moz wants the best of collectivism and the best of individualism - at least as he sees it.
Thread started in good faith and for the right reasons so thanks in advance.
I'm not going to get into an 'is he racist?' thing because on balance I don't think he is. I think Morrissey is a contrarian and supports the underdog at such things, hence he was 'left wing' in 80s Thatcher Britain and supports 'silent majority' outfits like UKIP and For Britain now. For what it's worth I think that Anne Marie Waters is a strange piece of work and I can't see the appeal, but Moz is welcome to support whoever he likes.
That said...I remember a quote from Billy Bragg to the effect of "I don't think Morrissey ever figured his politics out" and I think there's something in that.
People tend to fall into one of three camps politically in my experience:-
1) either conventional left (socially liberal, economically statist) or conventional right (other way round)
2) purist - so either individualist or statist on pretty much everything (I'm a classical liberal, so broadly individualist)
3) a bit all over the place, pick and mix
You get the feeling Moz is in camp 3 - he isn't a socialist, can't be called a conservative (his hatred of Thatcher nails that) and you can't see him as a Gladstonian liberal or anything like that. I'm surprised in some ways as you'd expect a man of his intelligence to reach some sort of conventional worldview, but perhaps as Billy says he is still figuring it out.
Morrissey is free market on some points and statist on others, socially liberal on some things yet almost reactionary on others. He pines for a romantic sense of English greatness and speaks highly of certain nationalist causes, yet surprises us with other thoughts on other subjects.
Is Morrissey some sort of far right loon? I honestly don't think so - and those fans who have ditched him over the accusation need to give their heads a wobble.
The assumption was that he was always a lefty - and the discovery that he's a 'pick and mix' guy has come as a shock to many. Ok that I get...you could understand him going full on Tory due to accumulated wealth or coming out as some sort of Libertarian/anarchist.
In the context of 'I've no idea what he stands for' I can perhaps get the disappointment - I don't know either, but he reminds me of so many people I grew up with who were all over the place and didn't seem to formulate a clear worldview on the old 'collective vs individual' question. That I think is the important one.
Perhaps Moz wants the best of collectivism and the best of individualism - at least as he sees it.
Thread started in good faith and for the right reasons so thanks in advance.