Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Arts Hub
    • Architecture
    • Fiction
    • Films
    • Life Writing
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Theatre
    • Visual Arts
  • Culture Hub
    • Clothing & Fashion
    • Cultural Commentary
    • Eating & Drinking
    • Education
    • Festivals/ Events
    • Religion
    • Science & Technology
    • Sport
    • TV, internet and other media
  • Contributors
  • Books
  • E-books
  • Support Us
0 0
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: £0.00

Checkout

Free delivery in the UK.

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Arts Hub
    • Architecture
    • Fiction
    • Films
    • Life Writing
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Theatre
    • Visual Arts
  • Culture Hub
    • Clothing & Fashion
    • Cultural Commentary
    • Eating & Drinking
    • Education
    • Festivals/ Events
    • Religion
    • Science & Technology
    • Sport
    • TV, internet and other media
  • Contributors
  • Books
  • E-books
  • Support Us
Facebook Twitter Instagram
0 0
0 Shopping Cart
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: £0.00

Checkout

Free delivery in the UK.

Return to previous page
Home Blog Culture Hub Cultural Commentary

Falange Goes to Salo

Falange Goes to Salo

26 July 2024 /Posted byNick Moss
Post Views: 1,669

Nigel Falange MP. He’s ditched the Gieves and Hawkes country squire Master of the Hunt outfit because that race has been won. The “man of the people” who’d far sooner drool spittle into a beggar’s open wound than share a pint with “the people” in a Clacton pub. His Revanchist Party goon coterie running to heel. All now taking their seats –their shiny once- in -a lifetime Ede and Ravenscroft trousers already gone slightly sweat- stale from farting arses fueled on proper ale and varicocele tightness at the crotch. Falange says they’re the new kids on the block. Falange as heartthrob Donny, side-swapping scab Lee as acting-hard Marky Mark, hanging tough with his wooden stick and shouting about Islamists and Travellers instead of slant-eyed gooks. The rest just faceless, lip-syncing, glad to be on stage.

Falange has sold Clacton his story that all its problems are caused by non-essential immigration. The boarded-up shops, the 5.1% unemployment. Falange can play a crowd as beautifully as Elly Ney played piano. Soon enough, the crowd of Londoners who retired to the sea air are muttering about woke ideology and immigrants stealing British jobs and those fuckin Muslims and their rejection of British values. Apparently, Sade lived in Clacton as a kid, but it’s these new kids on the block who know how to siren-sing the sweetest taboo. The cafes are all empty. The slot machines have no one to pay out to. Falange, Flashman at Dulwich and flash man on the trading floor, has played his shell game well. Clacton’s population is 95% white. “Where’s the ball? Where’s the ball? “He’ll double your money if you can find the ball.

Black sun rising over Salo-on-Sea and there’s all sorts of old shit rising up in the Colne as it crawls its way to Brightlingsea. Falange and his new party money men organizing charabancs full of pound shop Powellites to prowl the seafronts performatively gesturing and pointing, on the lookout for drowning children to mock, railing about gunboats and protecting borders, while coastal erosion drags Clacton into the sea. And Frangopoulos’s Haw Haws cheer on the Revanchist MPs as they work to turn a class-in-itself into a class against-itself. Falange wonders though how much time he has to waste breathing in the stale fish and chips and doughnut air before he can slime back to Mayfair pubs and a twilight wander through Shepherds Market. And somewhere a light aircraft engineer thinks aloud “We only have to be lucky once, you will have to be lucky always.”

Share Post
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Mail to friend
  • Linkedin
  • Whatsapp
What Rough Beast? A REVISED Ca...
Left Cultures: A Lexicon of St...

About author

Avatar photo

About Author

Nick Moss

Nick Moss is an ex-prisoner, published poet, reviewer and playwright. He writes the 'Soulfood' column in Communist Review. His latest book is 'Shooting to Kill' is available in our Books section.

Other posts by Nick Moss

Related posts

Cultural Commentary
Read more

A HOMAGE TO THE UNHOMED: ‘NATION OF STRANGERS’ BY ECE TEMELKURAN

Posted byJim Aitken
Post Views: 355 Nation of Strangers is available here By Jim Aitken For a number of years now Ece Temelkuran has been warning us about... Continue reading
Cultural Commentary
Read more

The Light of Perfection: Why Walter Benjamin Matters

Posted byOmar Sabbagh
Post Views: 941 Refugees by Konštantín Bauer By Omar Sabbagh How should we view the past? How do we do justice to the stories of... Continue reading
Arts Hub
Read more

Israel bombs Beirut: The Terror Of Not Knowing, in the Age of Trump

Posted byOmar Sabbagh
Post Views: 1,025 Israeli bombing of Nabatieh, March 10 2026. Wikimedia Commons Poem and commentary by Omar Sabbagh, in Beirut Freedom In The Age of... Continue reading
Cultural Commentary
Read more

Building a Library Campaign

Posted byJohn Pateman
Post Views: 332 Commons image By John Pateman My first article, Decolonising Public Libraries, explained the history and context of public libraries. This second article,... Continue reading
Cultural Commentary
Read more

Our Culture: Our history, their risk assessment – Why the grade listed buildings of today are the Lidls of tomorrow 

Posted byJack Clarke
In this edition of Our Culture Jack Clarke takes us on a tour of Salford and the stops includes several buildings that have been abandoned.... Continue reading

Categories

  • About us
  • Architecture
  • Arts Hub
  • Clothing & Fashion
  • Cultural Commentary
  • Culture Hub
  • Eating & Drinking
  • Education
  • Festivals/ Events
  • Fiction
  • Films
  • Life Writing
  • Life Writing
  • Music
  • Poetry
  • Religion
  • Round-up
  • Science & Technology
  • Sport
  • The 1917 Russian Revolution
  • Theatre
  • TV, internet and other media
  • Visual Arts
Recent Popular

The Plotland Houses of Britain: How a ...

18 May 2026 Comments Off on The Plotland Houses of Britain: How a 20th century working-class housing movement was stifled

A critique of class politics: the Cannes ...

18 May 2026 Comments Off on A critique of class politics: the Cannes Film Festival Opens with ‘The Electric Kiss’

Over and Over

18 May 2026 Comments Off on Over and Over

Action Man in the service of the ...

15 May 2026 Comments Off on Action Man in the service of the rich, and in the service of the poor: ‘Man on Fire’ and ‘Nowhere Man’

Contributors to Culture Matters

17 October 2017 Comments Off on Contributors to Culture Matters

The radical imagery of William Blake

2 March 2021 Comments Off on The radical imagery of William Blake

Music and Marxism

7 June 2016 Comments Off on Music and Marxism

About Us

23 December 2015 Comments Off on About Us

Tags Cloud

bbc Black Lives Matter Boris Johnson Brecht communism Covid19 Cultural democracy cultural struggle Donald Trump English Revolution Gaza Gaza genocide Genocide in Gaza George Orwell Hitler IDF Illegal war on Iran Iran Israeli bombing Israeli war crimes jeremy corbyn Jesus Karl Marx Keir Starmer Marx marxism Miners' Strike Miners' Strike 1984 Netanyahu Netflix Palestine Palestine Action poetry Raymond Williams Reform UK refugees Rishi Sunak Russian Revolution Shakespeare Spanish Civil War Starmer Starvation in Gaza by Israel Trump Ukraine william morris

Search

Print

follow us on our Social Networks

Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube

Copyright © 2016 - 2024 Culture Matters Co-operative Ltd; FCA Registration No: 4347; Registered office: 30 Glenbrooke Terrace, Gateshead, NE9 6AJ. All rights reserved.

Home
Support Us
Books