Adam Curtis on the fall of the Soviet Union's worrying parallels with modern Britain

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PoliticsJOE

PoliticsJOE

Күн бұрын

Adam Curtis is a journalist and filmmaker. His latest documentary, Russia 1985-1999: TraumaZone, is out now on BBC iPlayer.
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Пікірлер: 2 300
@stevea.b.9282
@stevea.b.9282 Жыл бұрын
I could listen to Adam Curtis all day. He affirms our fears and confusion, gives us reasons for why we feel this way instead of telling us to feel different, and re-focuses and clarifies the whole situation. Great interview Joe!
@benfennell6842
@benfennell6842 Жыл бұрын
Listen to voices that challenge and reinforce your ideas: not just one. People who tell you exactly what you want to hear arent automatically better to be listening to: even if they are right.
@casteretpollux
@casteretpollux Жыл бұрын
Listen to Jeffrey Sachs too
@adsyoffinch
@adsyoffinch 2 жыл бұрын
“The reason you feel bad is because you live in a shitty society, that’s not really discussed anymore…” It’s certainly something that should be, a lot of us who think we are depressed, anxious or just in bad mental health probably aren’t, we just live in a shit world where we are told that the problem is us. I’m taking that thinking into my daily life; I’m not sick, the world is just shit.
@richsan4923
@richsan4923 2 жыл бұрын
David Smail wrote a series of books about this as a phycologist well worth looking up!
@robertsolem9234
@robertsolem9234 2 жыл бұрын
It's very convenient for concentrations of power to have everyone taking "personal responsibility" for "their issues"; everyone is kept occupied with the demons in their head, rather than going out into the world and addressing the things that created these demons in the first place.
@monkeydotbizness
@monkeydotbizness 2 жыл бұрын
If you’re depressed and anxious and feeling alienated it’s likely you’re perceiving the world for the pile of shit that it generally is.
@chingadapistolero
@chingadapistolero 2 жыл бұрын
I think that's probably a very healthy approach!
@StoutProper
@StoutProper 2 жыл бұрын
Apparently it’s not so bad in Holland and Denmark, amongst other places
@aaronogden9900
@aaronogden9900 2 жыл бұрын
It's a parallel I noticed while reading about the final decades of the USSR. In the USSR older generations who prospered after WW2 where more pro communism than those born in the late 1960s and onwards who knew nothing but stagnation. In the UK people 31 or younger have only known working in an economy thats going nowhere.
@olivercuenca4109
@olivercuenca4109 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, it's the distinction between upper case 'Conservatism' - i.e. the ideology, and lower case c 'conservatism', where even if the government claims to be left wing, it can still fall into the trap of becoming the Establishment if it hangs around long enough. In the USSR I suppose that stuff probably goes back to Stalin.
@ascendedbro1828
@ascendedbro1828 Жыл бұрын
There was no stagnation lol. Stagnation is what happened after the collapse of USSR
@themsmloveswar3985
@themsmloveswar3985 Жыл бұрын
Well....that is the objective.....relentless wage repression.
@ineshvaladolenc6559
@ineshvaladolenc6559 Жыл бұрын
As odd as this sounds, people were more pro-communism under Lenin and Stalin, as vilified as they are in the contemporary Western media. It was the Khrushchevites and other revisionists, with their "de-Stalinisation" which took a working union and slowly ran it into the ground. Eventually as result of continuous renouncement of Stalin, an ideological vacuum occurred. People began to reject communism altogether. Coupled with economic stagnation, a cynicism gripped over the Soviet society. Eventually that culminated in the breakdown of the system, and replacement with a new, Western inspired capitalism and democracy... And it failed miserably, giving rise to the oligarchs, mostly older party functionaries who looted state assets and profited over the suffering of others. Both the fanatical Marxism and Bolshevism of the early 20th century, as well as starry eyed liberal idealism of the late 20th century failed Russia. This is why the current iteration of Russia is non-ideological. It is socially conservative as per old Russian tradition, and economically close to European style social democracy, except with more oligarchs but who are not allowed to interfere in politics as per the arrangement with Putin.
@Muzikman127
@Muzikman127 Жыл бұрын
@@ascendedbro1828 no, after the collapse of the USSR there wasn't stagnation, there was rapid, brutal, massive decline, and destruction. That's much much worse than stagnation
@blatherskite3009
@blatherskite3009 Жыл бұрын
Many thanks to Adam Curtis for putting this series together. I'd been getting increasingly annoyed with the way the BBC (and other UK media) report every belch and hiccup that happens in US politics as if it's of worldwide importance, but doesn't give even a hundredth of that coverage to other major nations. Watching "TraumaZone," it was fascinating to compare what was unfolding on-screen with my own understanding, gleaned from the UK media, of the history of what happened in Russia during that period, and the motivations of the key players - and discovering how utterly deficient it was. Gorbachev, for example, I recall being portrayed as a great reformer, the man who took Russia out of Communism; a guy the West could do business with, and therefore a "good guy." And then there's "TraumaZone" telling me Gorbachev was in fact attempting to save Communism - the opposite of the image I'd been given. Yeltsin, I realised, was portrayed in Western media as nothing more than a drunkard. But watching "TraumaZone" I realised what a Trump/BoJo-like character he was, and that Russia had "gone there" with its own Trump long before the US had theirs, and the UK had their Britain-Trump. In fact, the whole series actually left me wondering whether Russia had been some experimental test-bed for all sorts of social experiments that have since been applied to the West, e.g. what happens if we let Capitalism run riot, completely unfettered? What happens if we make the people wary of democracy by showing them that democracy, as a system, can produce these crazy wildcard leaders? Anyway, a fascinating series and many thanks for the education it provided :)
@alexcarter8807
@alexcarter8807 Ай бұрын
This post needs more upvotes. It's a bit tiring living in The Most Important Country(tm) and it's nice to see views from outside the US empire. Very good points about Gorby and Yeltsin.
@DaboooogA
@DaboooogA 2 жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is an archive wizard, and arguably the most important filmmaker alive.
@johndavies5985
@johndavies5985 2 жыл бұрын
He's good but hold on, he's not that good. Oliver Stone and Ken Loach are better.
@richardallan2767
@richardallan2767 2 жыл бұрын
Certainly the best documentary maker,
@adsyoffinch
@adsyoffinch 2 жыл бұрын
@@johndavies5985 they’re a different kind aren’t they? They tell stories that represent society, Curtis disembowels society and presents you with all the bloody, gory horror that boils away beneath the surface of the real world. Loach shows you a powerful representation, Curtis shows you the reality.
@Elcore
@Elcore 2 жыл бұрын
@@richardallan2767 Slow down - no one's managed to lethally shoot Werner Herzog yet, despite numerous attempts.
@annakissed3226
@annakissed3226 2 жыл бұрын
Adam your question as to the way forward has been answered many, many times before. Its the answer to the paradox of the need for both individualality & belonging. It is antithesis of autocracy. Autocracy comes not just from the extreme right and the extreme left but also from the extreme middle Autocracy comes from desire for certainty, a need to know that their is an underlying structure, a science of understanding, a need to find the purest essence that explains everything, of testing people for their purity. To seeking the one, typically a man, who can like God (another human meme) lead us all What is the inverse of that? What is its antithesis? It starts with diversity but builds on that diversity by teaching everybody how to lead. Its in leadership that we gather people and resources around us and strike out to achieve a goal. But the point is that its not leaders & followers. Its only leaders, So take this now, what your doing right now, right here! Your taking leadership in this & I am lending you some resources & insight & it might be helping, but its up to you to decide if needs to be included or not - because YOU ARE THE LEADER and I'm too busy doing my own projects to have the time or tuits/spoons to put into this your project. The idea of everyone as leaders is as old as the hills. It stands at the core of consious raising movements. At the start of the black & base civil rights movements and the LGBTQIA+ movements and Of Age & disability rights movements. Its not new and there multiple courses in how to make these things happen over decades A really useful set of tools can be found in the re-evaluation co- counseling community But their are others all over the place and lots of people have been trained in them So a lot of the work has been done it just needs to be written large in our schools, along with how to do critical thinking. And changing our schools so that you do your classroom teaching from well produced videos dispatched to anyone via the Web but the homework & discussion of the ideas & the writing of papers in class with everybody else. You can even have the classes filled with pupils learning with each other but on different things at their own rates coming together in virtual classrooms where the students are people from across the country working together to solve that module. The point is this provides a sense of collectivness of us all coming together to sacrifice & learn together Whilst providing maximum diversity in what you choose to learn for your benefit.
@kisfekete
@kisfekete 2 жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is one of the few Westerners who actually understand how the Soviet bloc disintegrated. I'm saying this as a person who was on the wrong side of the Iron Curtain at that time.
@jonnysupreme
@jonnysupreme 2 жыл бұрын
Debating which side is worse tbh 😆
@earthman6700
@earthman6700 2 жыл бұрын
@@jonnysupreme We have the resources to provide a relatively modern lifestyle for almost everyone. A 'Community' Political system might be it. Rather than appealing to certain elements of society. Sounds a bit like communism...
@aluisious
@aluisious 2 жыл бұрын
@@jonnysupreme The Western side is the one that is doing the heavy lifting when it comes to destroying the world for future generations.
@kisfekete
@kisfekete 2 жыл бұрын
​@@jonnysupreme Such relativism is the luxury of Western populations who either lived a rather sheltered existence in the past 40-50 years or were not even alive at the time. For the people there, at that place and at that time, there was no debate. Eastern Europe was the side worse off. Period. That's why the whole system collapsed completely, like a wet turd castle, and that is why it it could not be saved neither by the usual political reform-and-consolidate measures (like it happened in Hungary, or with Gorbachev) nor by military force (like in Romania, or the 1991 coup in the Soviet Union).
@M20RUM
@M20RUM 2 жыл бұрын
& I agree - as someone who has travelled and witnessed the fallout from that.
@jul7857
@jul7857 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been watching the Traumazone (all 7 episodes) all Sunday night long. I live in Russia all my life, I am 33, but I am still in such shock that I can’t sleep normally the second night. Can’t stop thinking about everything. Learning the history and listen to the elders opinions is one thing… but now I’ve got a feeling that I experienced all this horror and I'm just sad and endlessly hurt.
@manucnbiaelmaturana2754
@manucnbiaelmaturana2754 Жыл бұрын
Do you still live in Russia now?
@rogink
@rogink Жыл бұрын
I'd be interested to learn what younger Russians like you learnt about the Soviet system. It seems that a lot of older Russians think back with nostalgia of those days, even if at the time, they enviously looked to the West for all its wonderful consumer goods. They crave the stability of a strong leader. Even if life was very dull, it was predictable. Were you told about the food shortages and queues for bread in the 80s? Or the political prisoners and the Gulag system? Of even Soviet foreign policy and its proxy wars in Africa?
@ThickRedPaste
@ThickRedPaste Жыл бұрын
@@rogink The Gulags were a Stalinist idea, not communism
@rogink
@rogink Жыл бұрын
@@ThickRedPaste Who cares whose idea they were? They happened in the Soviet Union. Are you saying Russians shouldn't learn about their history under the Soviet system?
@ThickRedPaste
@ThickRedPaste Жыл бұрын
@@rogink No, I was saying that you can’t put the responsibility of millions of deaths on an ideology (unless we were talking about Nazi’s) it’s the people that execute and have biases that are to blame. Edit: And when you say “learning history” you probably don’t know what to point out. You can’t say that a biased and one sided report is history.
@frojoswaggins
@frojoswaggins 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly some of the most optimistic analysis I've heard in a long time. The fact that nobody actually really has a clue about what is going on, means we can still do something about it, if we actually start thinking and working together.
@malloc7108
@malloc7108 Жыл бұрын
The bit 20 minutes in about collective responsibility and looking out for one another is surprisingly optimistic.
@RealmsOfThePossible
@RealmsOfThePossible Жыл бұрын
From the birth of human consciousness and the unfathomable amount of minds that have existed on this planet not one of them have been able to say for certain or have any clue as to what the hell is going on and what existence is. We are born ignorant and die ignorant and spend our short time here in bewilderment...just enjoy the scenery.
@adamnouiguer3430
@adamnouiguer3430 Жыл бұрын
@@RealmsOfThePossible London Calling to the faraway towns Now war is declared and battle comes down London Calling to the underworld Come out of the cupboard, you boys and girls Etc Etc, I can't be bothered to write it all down.
@HominisLupis
@HominisLupis Жыл бұрын
Lol
@Alison-LoveAndUnity
@Alison-LoveAndUnity Жыл бұрын
The Green Party does and Corbyn did but hey our so called democracies ensure neither of those will ever be allowed near power.
@joecrabtree395
@joecrabtree395 Жыл бұрын
How on earth have I just discovered via this video that Adam Curtis has a new documentary out. This should be promoted EVERYWHERE! This may be the best thing the BBC releases this year...
@Espacemtl
@Espacemtl Жыл бұрын
My thought exactly!
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 Жыл бұрын
*From Wikipedia:* "In a departure from his usual style, Curtis opted not to use voiceovers or non-diegetic music. Curtis, in a piece in The Guardian, explained this choice was because the footage was 'so strong that I didn’t want to intrude pointlessly, but rather let viewers simply experience what was happening'." I was bored to tears. Am I the only one who *absolutely loves* Adam Curtis but *didn't give a rat's ass* about _TraumaZone?_ *What exactly does everybody actually like about **_TraumaZone?_*
@imbritish
@imbritish 2 жыл бұрын
You used the perfect interview format for Adam Curtis
@walidb123
@walidb123 2 жыл бұрын
The most important filmmaker Britain has had for many years
@nodisalsi
@nodisalsi 2 жыл бұрын
…who wasn't censored like Pater Watkins was. (RIP)
@petrichor649
@petrichor649 2 жыл бұрын
And maybe the most interesting.
@MrVas78
@MrVas78 2 жыл бұрын
He is but no one watches his stuff...that’s the problem. Too busy staring at immigration policies
@david-spliso1928
@david-spliso1928 Жыл бұрын
@@MrVas78 Illegal immigration by economic migrants. Seriously unfair on legal immigrants and refugees.
@MrVas78
@MrVas78 Жыл бұрын
@@david-spliso1928 home office problem, tax funded so it’s on them to sort out not for grifters to politicise based on bigotry
@joby19881
@joby19881 2 жыл бұрын
I've just finished watching Traumazone and have been champing at the bit to hear from Adam Curtis about it. This is a brilliant interview, and like he said, makes me feel strangely optimistic in a way. I hope we can work out a better way forward.
@StoutProper
@StoutProper 2 жыл бұрын
We’re going to need far better leaders than we’ve had for the past decade or so, and there’s no sign of them on the horizon. Things are going to get a lot worse before they get better
@artconsciousness
@artconsciousness Жыл бұрын
Curtis is the Picasso of our troubled times. His work should be obligatory watching in schools but if they were it could very well cause a revolution. I have been watching Curtis documentaries for decades now, some of them I have seen several times and each time I watch them I still discover something new. That's how deep his work goes.
@grahamberrie2462
@grahamberrie2462 Жыл бұрын
Great comment, totally agree
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 Жыл бұрын
*From Wikipedia:* "In a departure from his usual style, Curtis opted not to use voiceovers or non-diegetic music. Curtis, in a piece in The Guardian, explained this choice was because the footage was 'so strong that I didn’t want to intrude pointlessly, but rather let viewers simply experience what was happening'." I was bored to tears. Am I the only one who *absolutely loves* Adam Curtis but *didn't give a rat's ass* about _TraumaZone?_ *What exactly does everybody actually like about **_TraumaZone?_*
@artconsciousness
@artconsciousness Жыл бұрын
@@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 If someone doest get "TraumaZone" then they don't get it. May be later they will. Anyone who grew up in those turbulent time though will have not trouble getting it. This is history shown in a way it should be shown. From the perspective of the eyes of the people rather than through the eyes of the news media or professors of history.
@CatnamedMittens
@CatnamedMittens Жыл бұрын
That implies that people know of an alternative, which they don't.
@jimbob-robob
@jimbob-robob Жыл бұрын
Picasso? Don't you mean Henri Cartier-Bresson or Don McCullin?
@geordiedog1749
@geordiedog1749 Жыл бұрын
I worked as a CBT in IAPTS for ten years and I can completely concur with what they are saying about well being and mental heath. It’s spot on. We were just papering over the cracks. One of the best summations of the current state of the world/country I’ve heard. Excellent
@JosephusAurelius
@JosephusAurelius 2 жыл бұрын
Adam “and then something strange happened” Curtis. Love his films especially Hypernormalisation.
@notgarybrown
@notgarybrown 2 жыл бұрын
I even read it in his voice 🤣
@benday1218
@benday1218 2 жыл бұрын
'but that was a fantasy, instead.....'
@ennesshay5040
@ennesshay5040 2 жыл бұрын
From 2016 ~ the 1min 43sec ''The Coming War on China - a film by John Pilger - Official Trailer.'' Pause it at the 1.18 mark !!! Plus ( from Dec 2021 ) ''Shocking LBC Debate Shows New Cold War with China,'' the 14.37 video by Novara Media.
@Elcore
@Elcore 2 жыл бұрын
But they were all wrong.
@bigeddiespaghetti5618
@bigeddiespaghetti5618 2 жыл бұрын
“A new wave of intellectuals with optimistic outlooks arose”
@pipster1891
@pipster1891 2 жыл бұрын
We don't understand what the Russians went through 30 years ago but we still don't understand what the Russians went through in WW2. In Britain, it's like, oh we had the Blitz, weren't those doodlebugs terrible, weren't the king and queen marvellous and Churchill won the war. In Russia 28 million people died.
@PauliusTautvydas
@PauliusTautvydas 2 жыл бұрын
Russians have started the war and got a bit of their own medicine.
@StoutProper
@StoutProper 2 жыл бұрын
The British who lived and fought through the war did to a certain extent, Russians had the sympathy of that generation. The real problem is the Americans who don’t understand and don’t care. Russia’s feels threatened and the longer this goes on the more likely it is to end in nuclear war
@PauliusTautvydas
@PauliusTautvydas 2 жыл бұрын
​@@StoutProper you fail to understand Russia so much, that your yapping about "Americans who don't understand" something seems like just some kind of bad satire. But then again, apologism of corrupt, falling empire is what some middle aged, ultraconservative Brits like you can do best. Can't go back to crying about your own misunderstood empire, eh?
@StoutProper
@StoutProper 2 жыл бұрын
@@PauliusTautvydas I’m a 24 year old Irish Republican, so you’re way off the mark. Typical American, not a clue about anything or anyone outside their state.
@PauliusTautvydas
@PauliusTautvydas 2 жыл бұрын
@@StoutProper yeah well, then you're one hell of a lost 24 year old British (I don't really care whether it's Ireland or Wales) Republican. Don't drink so much beer and maybe you won't buy that deep into imperialist propaganda. That'll be good both for your physical and psychological health.
@Bandanko
@Bandanko 2 жыл бұрын
from the power of nightmares to Bitter lake (notseen his last few yet) this man has single handedily taught me more than ANY person i have ever known
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. And interesting you stopped at _Bitter Lake._
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 Жыл бұрын
*From Wikipedia:* "In a departure from his usual style, Curtis opted not to use voiceovers or non-diegetic music. Curtis, in a piece in The Guardian, explained this choice was because the footage was 'so strong that I didn’t want to intrude pointlessly, but rather let viewers simply experience what was happening'." I was bored to tears. Am I the only one who *absolutely loves* Adam Curtis but *didn't give a rat's ass* about _TraumaZone?_ *What exactly does everybody actually like about **_TraumaZone?_*
@lolcatjunior
@lolcatjunior Жыл бұрын
You should really watch his other series they are just as good or even better.
@gfarrell80
@gfarrell80 Жыл бұрын
Century of Self, Hypernormalization, and Can't Get You Out of My Head are IMHO his best.
@voltydequa845
@voltydequa845 Жыл бұрын
As you can see from some comments, the admirers are limited to just admiring. Have a talk, on concrete topics, and you'll see that cognitive quality does not correspond to the quality of admiration.
@Dreyno
@Dreyno 2 жыл бұрын
The difference is that Britain does have the potatoes. But the people who sowed and harvested them are being told they can’t have any potatoes because the people at the top want more potatoes than they could ever eat and the government are helping them to keep them.
@erisu69
@erisu69 2 жыл бұрын
Incredible insight from Adam Curtis as usual. His observation about society's current obsession with individual trauma is absolutely spot on.
@utubeape
@utubeape Жыл бұрын
it really works well in cultures who have been traumatised by Christianity
@adams8847
@adams8847 Жыл бұрын
great observer, a true observer mind as john le carre would have said!!! good shit
@al1sa920
@al1sa920 Жыл бұрын
I live in Russia and I started realizing the existence of such problem when State Duma proposed requirement for students who get budget-funded education to work in remote places for 3-5 years. Also government is highly encouraging doctors to work in small villages (and the name of this program is a reverence to a book named "A Young Doctor's Notebook" by Bulgakov). My parents were working like this because such practice was wildly used in the Soviet Union (it was also very encouraging since such jobs paid very well) and I fully understand the importance of such practice. However I was raised in the society where radical individualism is the main thing and while I'm aware that society is more important than single individual, I can't imagine myself doing this. I decided for myself to enjoy freedom and then eventually get to the point when I will work towards society and not only for my own benefit
@jt.124
@jt.124 Жыл бұрын
Trauma zone is an amazing and insightful series. Also I’ve listened to this interview multiple times. Curtis makes some amazing comparisons I have never thought about.
@animarriott
@animarriott 2 жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis has almost the clarity of Orwell. So important, and remarkably uplifting, despite our apalling state of affairs.
@dh1380
@dh1380 2 жыл бұрын
That is high praise indeed 🙌
@Wackaz
@Wackaz 2 жыл бұрын
Only Orwell was a liar and a moron and Curtis is neither of those things.
@the1andonlytitch
@the1andonlytitch 2 жыл бұрын
To be fair things weren't great during Orwell's time
@MrSimeonk
@MrSimeonk 2 жыл бұрын
Orwell also became disillusioned with Marxist Communism while recognising Western capitalism was equally flawed.
@richsan4923
@richsan4923 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrSimeonk he also worked in the security services!
@djd8305
@djd8305 2 жыл бұрын
I'm paraphrasing, but 'We don't realise what it was like for millions of Russians thirty years ago.' is a fantastic start to this video!
@octavianpopescu4776
@octavianpopescu4776 2 жыл бұрын
As an Eastern European, I would also add "And both the West and the Russians don't realise what it was like for us." What I mean by that is that our Eastern European experience is closer to countries like those in Africa and Russia was a version of what the Western empires were for Africans and Indians and other people. I'll never forget the Kenyan ambassador to the UN talk about his country and telling Russia what's what... He understood what was happening, because his country lived through what we lived in the East.
@KW-hk2jd
@KW-hk2jd 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. Boo hoo Russia - a lot of other countries have gone through Much worse so suck it.
@djd8305
@djd8305 2 жыл бұрын
@@octavianpopescu4776 I agree. Russian Communism was a destructive force. On top of Russia being ruled with an iron fist before Lenin and his gang took over, I read a comment somewhere that Russia was the worst country in which to try Communism as it was a rural/agrarian society not urban/industrial. So from the start the Communist Party had it wrong.
@djd8305
@djd8305 2 жыл бұрын
@@KW-hk2jd No. I meant that it was a bad thing. I've travelled a lot - including traveling through Iran in 2019, and one sure thing is sure. That People aren't the problem, it's Governments that cause the trouble. Yep people make up governments, but they don't decide to be oppressed.
@KW-hk2jd
@KW-hk2jd 2 жыл бұрын
@@djd8305 I was agreeing with Octavian Popescu, not you. The reason oppressive governments stand for so long is that they maintain a core of true believers, along with a corrupt elite. That's the sad truth.
@person.X.
@person.X. 2 жыл бұрын
I reckon Adam Curtis's analysis of our current situation is the most honest and thoughtful I have yet heard. He seems a very open minded guy. One of those people who is able to look at the world and attempt to see what is really going on as opposed to trying to impose his own self serving dogma. A very harsh judgement on the Dartford marshes though 🤣. One of my favourite places in the UK and I don't see it as full of knuckle dragging racists, not least because there are very few people living there. Lots of people in Dartford itself and the surrounding urban areas but in my experience they are a pretty good natured bunch and half of them are immigrants anyway.
@ZealothPL
@ZealothPL Жыл бұрын
I don't think he meant that they are knuckle draggers, but that the people living there have been suffering destitution and austerity for decades, so it's no wonder they threw in a wrench into gears of a system that is crushing them
@dogmatictales
@dogmatictales Жыл бұрын
The dartford marshes thing was a joke
@krayon_eater
@krayon_eater Жыл бұрын
*wooosh*
@mral4381
@mral4381 Жыл бұрын
Facebook created an algorithm to detect "racism". It discovered that immigrants in the UK very vastly more prone to it than any of the indigenous inhabitants. Hard times ahead for all, guaranteed.
@telesamgram1318
@telesamgram1318 Жыл бұрын
Adam is so apocalyptic in his films and in contrast so reassuring in this interview it makes this something to admire. Hope he's back to tell us what is wrong with the BBC and preferably being more specific than he is here. Thank you Joe!
@JosephusAurelius
@JosephusAurelius 2 жыл бұрын
8:35 Curtis completely summarises the current state of British politics. Incredible
@ChrisKeziahHyde
@ChrisKeziahHyde 2 жыл бұрын
I'd say 5:31 is pretty accurate
@SOMEHANDSOME
@SOMEHANDSOME Жыл бұрын
it is basically a russian folk saying I grew up with - `make things much worse rapidly, and then return everything to how things were before`. /paraphrasing/ bang - you`re a hero, not the tyrant you were yesterday. amazingly enough, formula worked, until /relatively/recently, when magic trick was exposed.
@drdavid1963
@drdavid1963 Жыл бұрын
@@ChrisKeziahHyde No one knows the alternative and everyone is completely beaten down by 12 years of austerity, the failed experiment of democracy in Brexit, 2 years of Covid and now inflation and the cost-of-living crisis. What's surreal is many of those same people will simply vote the Tories in again. It's what has been accepted as the new normality but, I think things haven't been normal for about 15 years and everyone's forgotten. I know he touched on individualism but for me, it's the lack of engagement in collective life which is really damaging long term. Covid hasn't helped. But I think Curtis is right in identifying the need for an alternative. Otherwise, things will get worse and we'll end up like Russia before too long.
@drdavid1963
@drdavid1963 Жыл бұрын
@@ChrisKeziahHyde Watch this about new book called How Economists Invented Austerity and Paved the Way To Fascism - kzbin.info/www/bejne/pZepg2SjeZeIha8
@drdavid1963
@drdavid1963 Жыл бұрын
@Paul Fournet It's not so much what I experienced but the ideological policy of austerity itself
@normskilight
@normskilight 2 жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is one the of these people who I wish was wrong. Through his films (that I've got a lot out of over the years) he paints a picture of humans (by their increasingly convoluted methods) being generally pretty sh**ty to eachother. But he's not wrong, the almost unchecked concentration of power and wealth is the the result of our current reward systems. It's these systems that need to change. And while you'd be a brave person to claim you have a solution ready to go, what increasingly encourages me is that sentiment is changing. I now feel I have more and more in common with more and more of my fellow humans from everywhere on the planet than ever, from the guy in the office I'd previously clash with on everything, to the protesters I've never met in Iran. And even in spite of the censorship and control from those who benefit from the current system, I see more compatriots wherever I look. And that's the start of something better, I'm optimistic.
@rossleeson8626
@rossleeson8626 2 жыл бұрын
I can’t help but be cynical about Iran. The stuff on the news has always been happening. I feel like we’re being conditioned for some good old democratic altruism.
@geroffmilan3328
@geroffmilan3328 2 жыл бұрын
@@rossleeson8626 things definitely look different in Iran this time. The last couple of times there has been major strife, they have been able to pit people against each other: those with water against those without, for example. And they went for brutal crackdowns after only 2 weeks. This time there appear to be no sides to divide & conquer, and it seems they realise that shooting or beating schoolgirls isn't a particularly viable reaction to the death of a very young woman in custody. Certainty is for the ignorant, but change is possible...
@joby19881
@joby19881 2 жыл бұрын
Very well put!
@richardc861
@richardc861 2 жыл бұрын
I agree but feel algorithms are growing stronger by the day and to the detriment of society. Reality is being distorted at such a level now that I find it hard to know what truth is.
@kevinjohnbetts
@kevinjohnbetts 2 жыл бұрын
@@richardc861 I think what you mean is that discerning facts from within the welter of opinion that we are bombarded with is increasingly difficult. Thirty years ago there were only a few perspectives on anything and it wasn't hard to work out what was actually happening. Now we have social media, KZbin channels, blogs, and the 'old' media all chasing smaller demographics. Each outlet spins the facts in order to appeal to its target audience meaning that everything you read, see, or hear, is subjective. Going in search of 'The Truth' involves being prepared to get uncomfortable. In my experience most people don't want to do that. They want to keep their beliefs simple and easy to convey. Even Curtis falls into that trap when he talks about 'The Climate Change Movement' because there isn't one. He's inadvertently following the narrative of the small groups who deny anthropogenic global warming and frame it as 'us against them'. Sorry that got away from me slightly. Brevity was never my strong suit. 😎
@smon4164
@smon4164 2 жыл бұрын
I was captivated by "Century of the Self" and everything else Adam Curtis has done. He's so eloquent in inviting you to put your foot down on the break and take a look at what's actually going on, from an outside perspective.
@paid14
@paid14 2 жыл бұрын
And them soundtracks tho
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 Жыл бұрын
*From Wikipedia:* "In a departure from his usual style, Curtis opted not to use voiceovers or non-diegetic music. Curtis, in a piece in The Guardian, explained this choice was because the footage was 'so strong that I didn’t want to intrude pointlessly, but rather let viewers simply experience what was happening'." I was bored to tears. Am I the only one who *absolutely loves* Adam Curtis but *didn't give a rat's ass* about _TraumaZone?_ *What exactly does everybody actually like about **_TraumaZone?_*
@smon4164
@smon4164 Жыл бұрын
@@paid14 The soundtracks are haunting, they fit the mood perfectly.
@smon4164
@smon4164 Жыл бұрын
@@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 I have not see TraumaZone, but century of the self and his stuff he did with Charlie Brooker on screen-wipe are next level, they quite frankly put him in a higher level than any 'mainstream' documentary filmmaker. It's too bad that the ones who are indoctrinated into the manufacturing of consent are the ones who are most likely to never find the time to self educate themselves about it by watching such documentaries.
@peterrenn6341
@peterrenn6341 Жыл бұрын
@@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 I agree Traumazone is a bit of a shock after the usual Curtis formula of eye-candy visuals and calm, compelling voice over but I love his work so I stuck with it - and after a while I 'got' what he was doing. As he says he was trying to replicate the experience, so yes, it's bleak, and horrific, and tedious and frightening and yes, it's hard to watch, but that's exactly the point. He's big on the idea that individualism (and by extension what he calls "oh dearism")means that if people aren't entertained or appealed to directly then they don't give a rat's ass. I came away from the full 7 hours humbled and with more sympathy for the people who went through (and are still going through) this horror. I don't feel better about myself but that's not what I watched it for. Not trying to change your mind, just trying to answer your question :-)
@zachthornton8337
@zachthornton8337 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic interview. Adam has some great insights into the malaise plaguing Britain. I was born in 1991 and the first 25 years of my life it really felt like nothing existed. Nothing to believe in. Nothing to fight for. It was great just pursuing what you want as an individual, as Adam says, until our system began breaking down with inequality accelerating. Whereas, now every day feels like living through history. Such a strange but unnerving feeling.
@Domdeone1
@Domdeone1 10 ай бұрын
Each of us is out in the words alone
@Destro7000
@Destro7000 10 ай бұрын
"inequality accelerating" fucking lol. Equality is communism. Inequality is the natural state of humans that elevates them out of poverty.
@xangma
@xangma Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this. I'd love if there were more interviews with Adam Curtis in the future :-D
@dietmarspriesterbach6
@dietmarspriesterbach6 2 жыл бұрын
One of the best reports I have heard for a long time. I also found a possible explanation for so many East Germans suddenly liking there old system!
@aluisious
@aluisious 2 жыл бұрын
East Germans liking the old system is pretty simple. 1) No unemployment 2) No homelessness 3) Free education 4) Affordable health care Happiness is mostly about reducing misery, not this fairy tale of "you too could be rich and powerful and good looking!"
@themsmloveswar3985
@themsmloveswar3985 Жыл бұрын
The East Germans told me that the police ran the DDR but the propaganda media ran the West. Being bullied produced a backlash. Pervasive lying is far more effective in preventing it, due to psychological damage.
@matthewdyer4752
@matthewdyer4752 2 жыл бұрын
Adam is excellent at explaining in simple terms the complexities of the systems that govern us. The systems that we don't learn about in school
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 Жыл бұрын
*From Wikipedia:* "In a departure from his usual style, Curtis opted not to use voiceovers or non-diegetic music. Curtis, in a piece in The Guardian, explained this choice was because the footage was 'so strong that I didn’t want to intrude pointlessly, but rather let viewers simply experience what was happening'." I was bored to tears. Am I the only one who *absolutely loves* Adam Curtis but *didn't give a rat's ass* about _TraumaZone?_ *What exactly does everybody actually like about **_TraumaZone?_*
@DV-dt9sq
@DV-dt9sq Жыл бұрын
I haven't seen this documentary yet, but you are right about learning about the system in schools. And, of course there is a reason for that...people on power do't want citizens to know it, because they might want to change it. It reminds me of the catholic church who forbid people from reading a bible. It was forbidden...the church was the only one who would tell them what was written in it...the church (priests) were the the only ones who could tell you what god wants. Total control of information.
@JelloTypeR
@JelloTypeR Жыл бұрын
⁠@@DV-dt9sqexactly. That why there was such slow progress and the church controlled the information. Until Gutenberg when books became more widely available to the people. The progress graph resembles a hockey stick.
@Ford-Prefect
@Ford-Prefect 2 жыл бұрын
It's always great to hear Adam Curtis talk about collectivism and individualism. You did an amazing job expanding the conversation. Top marks.
@Sankara-Setu-Mutanda-75
@Sankara-Setu-Mutanda-75 Жыл бұрын
Yes! I love Adam Curtis and his thoroughness. Makes life worth living. Thank you
@HeathcliffBlair
@HeathcliffBlair 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent interview. Thanks. Human ennuis is incredibly difficult to pin down. Modern tech communication has given people just enough information for them to realise that established societal systems don't really work and never really have. Unfortunately it's also given them too many diverse channels to express their dissatisfaction, and some of those channels are corrupt and corrupting. Tricky to say the least. Atomised individuals within atomised groups within atomised societies. BTW That Russian computer researched "stacked heels" strategy reminds me of the old Monty Python bit where a mega-corporation programmes a computer to solve the meaning of life. It returns with "People aren't wearing enough hats". 😀
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 Жыл бұрын
*From Wikipedia:* "In a departure from his usual style, Curtis opted not to use voiceovers or non-diegetic music. Curtis, in a piece in The Guardian, explained this choice was because the footage was 'so strong that I didn’t want to intrude pointlessly, but rather let viewers simply experience what was happening'." I was bored to tears. Am I the only one who *absolutely loves* Adam Curtis but *didn't give a rat's ass* about _TraumaZone?_ *What exactly does everybody actually like about **_TraumaZone?_*
@benclarke4470
@benclarke4470 Жыл бұрын
@@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 I think it speaks to some more than others. I allowed myself to be taken in by what I was seeing and actually, I think I learnt more from the video narration about the fall than I could have ever learnt from books. For me, the silent documentary made me realise a sense of commonality with others around the world that our societies are desperate to suppress. It didn't need narration, we spend our lives being told what to think, this was about just ingesting raw material and making our own interpretations.
@ozmer
@ozmer 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic interview! Adam Curtis is incredibly insightful on societal wide problems. One quibble is that the city video footage is too interesting and I found myself repeatedly having to go back because I wasn't paying attention to the audio.
@robertsolem9234
@robertsolem9234 2 жыл бұрын
Lol, that's like me actually watching Curtis' films -- I'm either watching the footage or I'm listening to the narrative T_T.
@BigBoiiLeem
@BigBoiiLeem 2 жыл бұрын
That very cogent bit about seven minutes in about Britain coming to the end of something really stuck with me, his depth of knowledge about that time period is incredible
@nightw4tchman
@nightw4tchman 2 жыл бұрын
He's a breath of fresh air is Adam Curtis. Great to hear from him again on an up to date issue.
@blairhakamies4132
@blairhakamies4132 Жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is TOP WORLD REFERENCE. He deserves ALREADY the Nobel Prize related with so much he made in terms of literature. 🏆
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159
@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 Жыл бұрын
*From Wikipedia:* "In a departure from his usual style, Curtis opted not to use voiceovers or non-diegetic music. Curtis, in a piece in The Guardian, explained this choice was because the footage was 'so strong that I didn’t want to intrude pointlessly, but rather let viewers simply experience what was happening'." I was bored to tears. Am I the only one who *absolutely loves* Adam Curtis but *didn't give a rat's ass* about _TraumaZone?_ *What exactly does everybody actually like about **_TraumaZone?_*
@blairhakamies4132
@blairhakamies4132 Жыл бұрын
@@miyojewoltsnasonth2159 each person understand it in different ways. Keep on being a source of inspiration for a better world. 🌹
@kendrickpi
@kendrickpi Жыл бұрын
Three things are needed: 1. Proportional representation; 2. Land Value Taxation, replacing local business tax and personal income tax; 3. A revised Beveridge settlement to fight todays giant evils. These things I know, these things I desire for the UK.
@craigmorrow2939
@craigmorrow2939 2 жыл бұрын
Another brilliant interview by a brilliant filmmaker. I'm so glad he's spoken about his documentary because I missed hearing his own words in the actual film itself
@sprkraida
@sprkraida 2 жыл бұрын
Throughout TrauZone I coud hear his narration, born in my mind, but oh so real. His voice is very peculiar. I love it
@craigmorrow2939
@craigmorrow2939 2 жыл бұрын
@@sprkraida "What Yeltsin failed to realise...."
@joannewalker4232
@joannewalker4232 2 жыл бұрын
Bloody wonderful, I watched his 7 part series Traumazone on Russia yesterday. So glad I listened to this, he just manages to tap into the zeitgeist and get to the marrow of what is happening and I'm so thankful for his optimism at the end, I feel it too, all is not lost. ❤
@jamesstockwin2802
@jamesstockwin2802 2 жыл бұрын
Most brilliant discourse I’ve listened to for quite some time, thank you for uploading 😊
@mbrierley144brierley3
@mbrierley144brierley3 Жыл бұрын
Corbyn offered an alternative but he scared those who own most of the assets so much, they had to destroy him
@Ballardian
@Ballardian Жыл бұрын
Yep, Corbyn was the UK's last chance of having something resembling a humane government. It won't happen again.
@gwcstudio
@gwcstudio Жыл бұрын
Curtis seems behind the scenes and, when he tries to explain it, it feels like he has pulled aside the mirror and revealed all the broken gears that make the world work. He clarifies things while linking them together, which makes everything seem bigger and more complicated.
@Mirandorl
@Mirandorl 2 жыл бұрын
This honestly left me scratching my head. Adam points out that in Russia, the oligarchs at least just _happened upon_ a way to make chaos work for them. They didn't choose the chaos, communism made the choice for them. But in the UK and the US, as Adam says, we keep seeing the same thing. A series of choices that benefit the most wealthy, and harm the poorest. Am I the only one seeing this? If you hold wealth and power, and you keep making the same "mistake" again, and again, and again; and that "mistake" gives you more wealth and power whilst always stripping it from others ... Is it really a David Icke fever dream to suggest the hypothesis that this just might be by design? Is this meant as an exercise for the listener to complete the sentence? I can understand when the markets do it. That's what they are designed to do. But when it constantly ends up enshrined as public policy, deliberate action certainly does not seem a far fetched conclusion.
@thedualtransition6070
@thedualtransition6070 Жыл бұрын
Before the collapse of communism, through the 1960s and 1970s increasingly kleptocratic, corrupt elements took shape within the communist party. Once Gorbachev set the collapse train in progress these elements grabbed the opportunity. Gaidar, a member of the communist nomenklatura, explicitly stated that he did shock therapy to make a return to communism impossible. In 1993, they destroyed democracy in Russia to stop the parliament from putting a stop to the chaos that facilitated the looting. At the same time the Western financiers both facilitated and took part in the looting. The chaos did not just "happen", Adam sees the images on the wall but doesn't investigate who produced the images and why. All surface analysis and no real political economy. He seems to be very insightful, but in reality his analysis is very superficial in many ways.
@Voltan
@Voltan Жыл бұрын
its almost like we live in a _kleptocracy..._
@thegreatdream8427
@thegreatdream8427 Жыл бұрын
This is the fundamental nature of capitalism. The current economic system is and has for hundreds of years been essentially a wealthy class, containing both the business owners and the politicians, working together to maintain their control and siphon wealth from everyone else. The market is rigged in their favor by the government. A truly free market wouldn't do that, but there actually has never been a truly free market - even back when propaganda claims the economy was laissez faire, it wasn't - it was just more *blatantly* rigged in favor of the rich. The problem here is the continued survival of states whose sole purpose is and has always been to protect the rich from the poor. A democratic revolution from the bottom up, where people reject the idea of "representatives" in some faraway capital and instead govern themselves locally by direct democracy in a series of federated levels via instantly recallable delegates who have no power to make decisions without ratification by referendum, may be what we need to revitalize the world. Consider the example of democratic confederalism in the autonomous cities of northeast Syria, which operate on similar lines - or more generally look into the history of anarchist thought, particularly the strain known as mutualism, which I think is the most reasonable direction to go from where we are, as it doesn't require a radical break from the market system but only a series of specific reforms that ultimately boil down to ending the wealthy class's centuries-old rigging in their favor, and gradually dismantling the state in favor of more and more local autonomy, returning control over people's lives to the people themselves. Kevin Carson's book "Studies in Mutualist Political Economy" is very eye opening, both in its explanation of how the economy really works, and could be reworked, and in its description of the history of the current system - the *extremely corrupt* history. It's mainly focused on America after it reaches the 20th century, but I expect similar things happened in Britain.
@nd15music73
@nd15music73 Жыл бұрын
You're right except for you also miss that 'the oligarchs' were a part of the western system and the elites of the u.s were running russia in the 90s and 'the russian oligarchs' was coordinated with the u.s.a. a good video on this is on youtube titled 'Who Were The Oligarchs Who Plundered Russia?' by Keith Woods.
@nickthurn6449
@nickthurn6449 Жыл бұрын
We are seeing a lot of populists harnessing the anger of ordinary people and turning it against the tried and tested solutions seen in much of northern Europe. Inequality isn't really the problem - no one cares when everyone has "enough" but a few are obscenely wealthy - it's when Mr & Mrs Average are suddenly having their livelihoods sucked dry by employers with the connivance of government that people lose hope. In a sane world there would be no billionaires - no one needs or can even spend that sort of money but it does but a lot of protection and influence.
@Esther-Pesta
@Esther-Pesta 2 жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is such an important historian. Thanks for this great interview 🙏🏻
@cerdic6305
@cerdic6305 2 жыл бұрын
He’s not a historian, he’s a filmmaker
@marmadukesandwich
@marmadukesandwich 2 жыл бұрын
He's no historian. His films sound and look good but they have no weight to them. It's all extremely shallow and it shouldn't be taken for truth or real history. At least he's never claimed as such, he calls himself a story-teller.
@martycrow
@martycrow 2 жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is one of the most important post-Cold War interpreters of where we are and why we are here, I urge everyone to explore his works. The catalogue is substantial but even if you limit it to the last 20 years or so, the 21st Century, it will be rewarding beyond your expectations - if you keep an open mind. Curtis has had a similar effect on me as Zinoviev's Yawning Heights (1980) which was an absurdist critique of Soviet Communism. Curtis is unbound by ideologies of orthodox Left or Right. He observes, unmasks and interrogates. And points to our complicity in the bullshit.
@futurenow2037
@futurenow2037 2 жыл бұрын
The way is open... Adam Curtis documentaries over the decades are an essential archive of alternate and contrasting perspectives that demonstrate why we are where we are today. After listening to this intriguing discussion I propose however, that some people do have alternative ideas to the dying system we see before us. One new, very small, contributor of which is within this new novel, The Future Now, many themes and issues chime with the topics raised here, and in other films by Adam Curtis. It is available on PreOrder now and in paperback from 5th dec and the backdrop is indeed the UK of 2050 during its next incarnation, after a drastic systematic shift brought on by social upheaval, Adam and anyone watching may find the system design interesting perhaps even the plot and personal journey of the main character.... thanks Politics Joe and Adam Curtis 👍✊
@bigburd875
@bigburd875 Жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is one of the most insightful filmmakers I've ever hear
@stephanguitar9778
@stephanguitar9778 2 жыл бұрын
I used to work with a Russian who told me that back in the 70s - 90s, everyone had a job, could see the doctor, have somewhere to live but just got by. By the year 2000 he said , either you have black money or no money. I see this happening in the UKs rentier economy given another innings of the Tories.
@earthman6700
@earthman6700 2 жыл бұрын
I've asked a number of older Eastern Europeans what is different from the old Soviet days to now. I've always had the response, 'Everyone had a job and a roof over their heads'. It was something of some importance to all of them. What I see in the US and the UK does not show us as particularly advanced, despite the wealth of the Countries.
@srpacific
@srpacific 2 жыл бұрын
I don’t think this is a uniquely tory problem. You’ll find that the same system exists no matter what party is in power - this is exactly what Curtis is saying in this interview
@StoutProper
@StoutProper 2 жыл бұрын
Loads of Brits have got black money. They wouldn’t be any to get by otherwise.
@daniles
@daniles Жыл бұрын
Yes, everybody in USSR had a place to live but you had to stand in line for an apartment for decades. Because you couldn't buy an apartment. It was forbidden. Yes, everybody had a job but it was really little paid. There was a phrase "You pretend to pay us, we pretend to work". You could see a doctor but the treatment prescribed was often awful and with no competence. Most of the people in USSR had black money or just stole something at work to sell it or to use it at home. And the most important thing that inherited from soviet times is that many people still want the state to give everything to them. And of course, no politics at all, like in soviet times. It's the state that is in politics. That's why Putin still has the power over them. He's their Big Brother. I lived both in USSR's 80s and Russia's 90s and 2000s.
@GreenTeaViewer
@GreenTeaViewer Жыл бұрын
Wake up. It's not about the Tories or the other party. This is the end game of the financial system post-ww2 collapsing throughout the West. There is nothing left for the 1% to plunder.
@Google_Does_Evil_Now
@Google_Does_Evil_Now 2 жыл бұрын
Liz Truss is an ex-Shell executive. Shell have recently become one of the largest energy suppliers in the UK. They have a shocking contract created with them and the government where they can increase bills by 400% even though the costs of getting British gas and British oil out of the ground has NOT increased. It's our gas and oil, from our land. They are just extracting it for us. Why aren't we ONLY paying them an extraction fee? Why aren't the Tories going after the executives from these exploitative businesses as hard as they go after the working people of Britain? Oh look, the Tory government are also executives of these same rip-off companies with exploitative contracts! They are stealing from us in so many ways.
@acolli777
@acolli777 2 жыл бұрын
They keep blaming the energy crisis on the war in Ukraine but don't even consider passing a "wartime act" to do as u have suggested: make the energy companies sell OUR gas to us at a fair profit not at exorbitant rip off prices
@richsan4923
@richsan4923 2 жыл бұрын
You answer your own question. The Tories are representatives of a faction of the British capitalist class.
@trevfindley
@trevfindley 2 жыл бұрын
Best interview I've listened to in a long while. Well done to all involved. Love AC's films, can't wait to watch the latest series.
@dorsetengineering
@dorsetengineering 2 жыл бұрын
It’s brilliant, isn’t it…. Have you watched Bitter Lake?
@dirkkoopman174
@dirkkoopman174 Жыл бұрын
For what it's worth, I offer this observation: During the 1980s, in Norfolk, there was a strong and healthy cadre of volunteers from all ages and walks of life for all sorts of useful organisations like St John's Ambulance as well as youth organisations like Scouting etc. By the 1990s, "working people" started to drop out at an alarming rate, to the extent that the volunteers that remained, were either retired or had sufficient money to devote the necessary spare time. And the reason those "working people" gave? Not enough money to pay the bills; we're working double shifts or second jobs; our partners have to work work as well; so we need to expensive child care (which frequently subsumed up 80+% of the extra wages earned). People because too busy working and/or too tired to volunteer. They most definitely had "no spare time". But, should they have thought that they did have some spare time then rather than volunteer, they would try a get a paying job to fill it. Until people can work for a truly living wage, one that allows people to rest and have some quality leisure time, Britain will continue to elect grandiloquent people like Boris to make "grand gestures" like Brexit "happen" to the further detriment of the people living in the UK. Good luck with sorting that out.
@harrywilliams439
@harrywilliams439 Жыл бұрын
What an absolute masterpiece. I enjoyed every second of that. I will share with video with all my friends and family. People just need to widen their views and understand the danger we are in right now
@adamsharpe9452
@adamsharpe9452 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing interview. Few people are as captivating as Adam Curtis.
@geroffmilan3328
@geroffmilan3328 2 жыл бұрын
Great work guys. I watched the 1st episode of the new series, but really glad to hear Adam talking about the overall concept.
@ItsMeBenson
@ItsMeBenson 2 жыл бұрын
Curtis is a marvellous journalist and this was a fascinating interview
@terryhand
@terryhand Жыл бұрын
Trauma Zone was outstanding. This was by far one of the best interviews I have seen on this channel. Adam Curtis is raising issues here that most commentators are far too entrenched in their positions on either the left or the right to even see. I do wish I could be as optimistic on China and Iran, but perhaps time will prove me wrong.
@attheprecipice1090
@attheprecipice1090 8 ай бұрын
It's not just Britain, the "collective west" is heading for a Soviet style collapse. Dmitry Orlov analysed these similarities in his 2008 book "Reinventing collapse - Soviet example, American prospects"
@MirceaKitsune
@MirceaKitsune 2 жыл бұрын
What an incredible interview to listen to: At first it felt annoyingly long, near the end I wanted it to go on for longer. This is a truly woke person.
@MackerelCat
@MackerelCat Жыл бұрын
Woke in an interesting way, not in the perjorative sense that the word is often used now.
@peter.a.langan5872
@peter.a.langan5872 Жыл бұрын
Not woke….somewhat more awake than most. The ‘woke’ are just an easily influenced group.
@maeton-gaming
@maeton-gaming Жыл бұрын
@@MackerelCat idk, the fact that the Nazis paraded around with "awaken" on their red banners at their rally's just has always made me extremely leery of the word!
@tybes99
@tybes99 2 жыл бұрын
What a fantastic video and incredible commentary from Adam Curtis on so many culturally relevant topics. His understanding for the modern world and the old world is exactly what's needed in politics to push this country forward
@ethan5719
@ethan5719 2 жыл бұрын
Some amazingly interesting topics raised; I have for a long time believed that change in the modern day needs not just a societal or cultural change, but a change to human nature and the way we have been raised in this society in whole.
@robpallot5058
@robpallot5058 Жыл бұрын
"Being in the woods with friends = exciting Being alone in the woods = scary"
@sbaumgartner9848
@sbaumgartner9848 Жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is an amazing journalist and filmmaker. I didn't realize he also produced The Century of the Self series. Thank you Adam! And thank you PoliticsJoe for this video.
@andymcdonald8922
@andymcdonald8922 2 жыл бұрын
That was really enjoyable. Never really heard of adam curtis, but seems to have a pretty decent analysis of the current situation we find ourselves in and a hopeful glimpse into the future
@garysantana7906
@garysantana7906 2 жыл бұрын
if you dont know his work, you should 100% check out his past documentaries, i would start with 'century of the self'
@geroffmilan3328
@geroffmilan3328 2 жыл бұрын
@@garysantana7906 century of the self is an amazing work imho - must-watch.
@the1andonlytitch
@the1andonlytitch 2 жыл бұрын
I will also point you towards Hypernormalisation which goes through a lot of what he is saying today
@StoutProper
@StoutProper 2 жыл бұрын
You’ve just opened up a rabbit hole for yourself, prepare to be amazed
@claudew7763
@claudew7763 2 жыл бұрын
Man this channel is so good...!
@jeancampbell4341
@jeancampbell4341 Жыл бұрын
South African, Michael Tellinger, is a scientist, explorer an author. He is the founder of the UBUNTU Liberation movement and has developed the 'One Small Town' concept. It is worth exploring.
@spenjames1861
@spenjames1861 Жыл бұрын
The greatest socio-political Documentary maker... full stop! Traumazone has completely changed my view of modern Russia. Well done to all involved.👍👍👍
@marcus_electric
@marcus_electric 2 жыл бұрын
I need to rewatch Can't Get You Out Of My Head too.. amazing filmmaking
@mickyfrazer786
@mickyfrazer786 2 жыл бұрын
It's not that they don't have an alternative it is that they don't want to impose something fairer as they fear they will lose out on power or wealth or both
@jackduxbury1632
@jackduxbury1632 2 жыл бұрын
Primo “Content” - Thank you Joe 🙏
@GloriousSonOfYork
@GloriousSonOfYork 2 жыл бұрын
why "content" in quotation marks?
@JDMPhil87
@JDMPhil87 Жыл бұрын
Adam is right to the extent that “the genie can’t be put back into the box” but only to the extent it’s a recognition that modern individualism is hedonistic and ideological. If you can reeducate people to understand the true nature of social reality, and what it means to be human in a political society you can fix politics. People just need to stop being afraid of C.
@InnuendoXP
@InnuendoXP Жыл бұрын
Sadly, as long as there's money to be made, I think the combined business & media landscapes will prevent any sufficiently aligned movement of counter-perception to coalesce & the best you'll be able to do is some occasional fringe commune.
@lau_dhondt
@lau_dhondt Жыл бұрын
Fantastic interview. Much love for Adam Curtis
@CallousCarter
@CallousCarter 2 жыл бұрын
I read the book Red Plenty which gives a semi-fictional but well researched account of what went wrong with the Soviet Planning model over the decades and the way the party apparatchiks behave in that reminds me so much of how the average PMC public sector person behaves in the UK.
@Strykehjerne
@Strykehjerne 2 жыл бұрын
Wonderfully pertinent and thought provoking.. and very accurate regarding what the UK looks like from abroad, to someone who used to feel at home in a way, there..
@Dewsta26
@Dewsta26 2 жыл бұрын
Extremely interesting. Thank you. ❤️🖤🚩🏴
@sandycheeks7865
@sandycheeks7865 Жыл бұрын
I absolutely LOVE the way Adam can talk and talk and talk about everything I'm also thinking about, but he has thought about them more deeply and for a lot longer - he is obviously less distracted with the shitty stuff than i am - and when I listen to him talking, I feel his conclusions of where I should have bothered to get to. None of it is too complex, or hard to understand. He will just come out with 'you can feel bad because you think there is something bad inside you, or you can feel bad because you live in a shitty society' and he is bang on the money. I can then have a ten minute conversation with my 13 year old about TikTok which might, just might help him understand why HE feels guilty and bad. Brilliant man.
@FreemonSandlewould
@FreemonSandlewould Жыл бұрын
He walks right up to the subject then misses it entirely. That's Adam Curtis for you.
@geoffmilner
@geoffmilner Жыл бұрын
​@@hamc9477He's got no solutions.
@geoffmilner
@geoffmilner Жыл бұрын
@@hamc9477 Certainly not if you are making programmes about a subject. Russell Brand has the same pointless style, criticising while alluding to some kind of utopia that should be achievable, but never explaining what it is or how to get there. Curtis just rambles on about the public and elites being confused that there isn't an overarching plan, but there should be one. He said in Bitter Lake that Afghanistan was at the centre of the world and yet he never mentioned it. Clearly he's nowhere on domestic or international geo politics. All he's got is remaining in the EU and climate change as his guiding principles No different to David Attenborough.
@geoffmilner
@geoffmilner Жыл бұрын
@@hamc9477 I agree, so many of these think tanks, institutions, NGOs, charities etc are appointed and operate in the background without oversight that we never even see their influence on decisions that are being made. They are parasitic in nature, all surviving on taxpayers money, or even worse, money from industry and other foundations, who want special favours. The regulatory capture of the MHRA is a prime example as it is 80% funded by the pharmaceutical industry by way of the Gates foundation. The govt then funds the dangerous poisons ad infinitum. Mainstream Curtis would never get into the root causes of a problem like that unless he upsets the BBC commissions he's been dining out on for decades. The BBC and media are an essential part of how the corruption is carried out by keeping the public controlled and onboard with all of the false narratives.
@2x94Z
@2x94Z Жыл бұрын
@@geoffmilner you know Marx, Kropotkin, Bakunin, Bookchin etc didn't have concrete plans either? It's not like do this, this and this, and tada, proletarian revolution. And it's not up to them or documentary directors to make them, it's the people involved.
@zeddeka
@zeddeka 2 жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is fairly unique in his mixture of stimulating insight and crankery.
@TheSeanj87
@TheSeanj87 2 жыл бұрын
“Not just the right , but the Liberals and the Left are celebrating a ‘return to calm’ which is mad’ Um……No? The left isn’t celebrating it at all, have I lost my mind? Can anyone else help me out here?
@funbarsolaris2822
@funbarsolaris2822 2 жыл бұрын
You're right, it's the liberals not the left, Curtis (as much as I like and respect him) often conflates the two. Is it just me or is the inspiring new model for society exactly what Corbyn was proposing? Hasn't he been proved right in the most extraordinary way?
@TheSeanj87
@TheSeanj87 2 жыл бұрын
@@funbarsolaris2822 I agree
@maxhaughton1964
@maxhaughton1964 2 жыл бұрын
You have reached the entropic end-state of curtisism - Curtis usually exists like a sage old orangutan in the tree above the monkeys on the ground. He has genuine prescience fairly frequently but rarely in the specifics of people and real (day-to-day vote winning) movements.
@raymondanderson3624
@raymondanderson3624 Жыл бұрын
He talks as if the West had absolutely nothing to do with the collapse of the Soviet Union.
@brentoneccles
@brentoneccles Жыл бұрын
@@funbarsolaris2822 Corbyn’s programme is certainly the only hope for saving Capitalism from itself.
@oliverlaw02
@oliverlaw02 2 жыл бұрын
Russia got potentially inexhaustible oil, gas, mineral resources and is self-sufficient in agriculture produce and Britain has what? There's no comparison.
@chadimirputin2282
@chadimirputin2282 2 жыл бұрын
Britain has an abundance of plebs.
@joshuacampbell1625
@joshuacampbell1625 2 жыл бұрын
And yet despite that, the living standards of Russians have been less then Britons throughout modern history. Also we're not in the middle ages anymore, and the world economy is based on alot more then just food and natural resources.
@person.X.
@person.X. 2 жыл бұрын
A small island that has been rich and stable for generations vs a continental sized country with all its advantages that has as its main claim to fame the ability to relentlessly over centuries treat its own people like shit and ruin their lives. Never has a nation squandered its potential like Russia has.
@awordabout...3061
@awordabout...3061 Жыл бұрын
Russia has the classic resource problem - she has relied on extraction for so long that the Russian industrial sector now can do almost nothing else. We've seen that as foreign firms have pulled out, they're unable even to produce railway bearings to keep their rail stock rolling, and they're burning huge amounts of gas because the complex tasks of managing and operating gas extraction simply isn't in their wheelhouse. Britain, putting aside the North Sea Oil, doesn't have much in the way of commercially viable natural resources since we've decided not to mine (which makes sense if mined metal from elsewhere is much cheaper) and yet is a very wealthy country, even if it is very unevenly distributed.
@themsmloveswar3985
@themsmloveswar3985 Жыл бұрын
Britain has Peppa pig world according to Boris Johnson.
@TheTristanmarcus
@TheTristanmarcus Жыл бұрын
I have been drawing the parallels between the late Soviet Union and Britain, for the last 30 years under the new Soviet junta, for several decades - TraumaZone is a truly exceptional set of films 😎🙏🏽❤️
@elizabethbarberis9058
@elizabethbarberis9058 2 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this interview. The positive ending echoes my feelings. It is more than time for something new and our youth will find it.
@eddouglas
@eddouglas 2 жыл бұрын
yeah this bloke doesn't seem to be able to accept the answers are already there, it's just from people he must believe are wrong. it's just confirmation bias isn't it?
@SvalbardSleeperDistrict
@SvalbardSleeperDistrict 2 жыл бұрын
"It is more than time for something new and our youth will find it." I appreciate wishing for something better to come, but that happens when there are pretty specific grounds for it. e.g. the late 19th/early 20th century working class around the world achieved so much because it had class consciousness. We live in the time of the cult of personality, promotion of self as a brand, and total privatisation of every service, platform and venue in society. This is not laying the ground for collective emancipation, and the impending climate collapse does not leave much time for that class consciousness to start forming.
@BlackTearDrop
@BlackTearDrop 2 жыл бұрын
I recommend anyone who liked the ideas explored in this about systems and how no one can imagine anything next read up on Mark Fisher (K-Punk) and his writing on Hauntology and Capitalist Realism. He sadly passed away but I feel like now, more than ever, those concepts need to be brought up and discussed.
@robertsolem9234
@robertsolem9234 2 жыл бұрын
@@fvefve12 You won't regret it -- Mark Fisher was brilliant. Fisher's Capitalist Realism should be considered a companion piece to this interview.
@matthewcoombs3282
@matthewcoombs3282 Жыл бұрын
I highly recommend Mark Fisher's work "K- Punk" and "Capitalist Realism". He completely outlines our current cultural cul-de-sac so well.
@colinsavill3459
@colinsavill3459 2 жыл бұрын
Have to say I thought Traumazone suffered by not having Curtis voiceover.
@mootpointjones8488
@mootpointjones8488 Жыл бұрын
It's always a pleasure to listen to Adam Curtis 👍
@Google_Does_Evil_Now
@Google_Does_Evil_Now 2 жыл бұрын
Has he got an aversion to calling out corruption? Osborne created the exit of 2nd home landlords, often couples who each had their own flat but moved in together and rented the other one out. Or parents died and left it to their kids, who rented it out. And those who followed the BBC morning TV show, on every morning for a decade or more, encouraging everybody to go to auctions buy houses, do them up and rent them or sell them. Osborne change the rules to encourage foreign investors to buy thousands of British homes and to make it difficult for small people to continue renting out a second home. This has led to an extreme shortage of property to rent in London. Increased unaffordability. Increased overcrowding. This was a deliberate plan by Osborne. At the same time there's been a huge number of high-rise apartment blocks being built asking for high rents. Can you see how these align with each other? And we have massive investors buying up ordinary British housing as long term lets to require higher rents. Can you see how these are aligning nicely for the rich? It's simple maths. We can see the plan. Please call it out. Liz Truss, ex-Shell executive, and Kwasi Kwarteng, banker, deliberately stated policies in order to cause huge pressure on the pound and force the Bank of England to raise interest rates. When the bank didn't raise them enough he piled even more pressure on. The interest rate rises will help to make two million people homeless. These people will be evicted from their homes and forced to rent at high rents. These two million homes will come into the market at a time and ordinary people will not be able to get mortgages to buy them. So they will be brought up by rich investors and then rented out to people who can no longer afford to buy. The "everyone renting, everyone paying us half of their money every month" plan is blatant. Please call it out. Other countries put measures in place to stop this. They have rent controls. I have limits on the number of properties investors can buy. They help ordinary people to build or buy their own homes at COST price. "Rent To Own" Scheme Ireland will build homes for families and charge them rent. When the family has paid back the cost of the building through rent then the home is given to them. This helps to control the private market, putting them off exploding people. The complete opposite to the UK.
@mattylamb9194
@mattylamb9194 Жыл бұрын
Didn't Ireland have massively increasing house prices in the noughties? Even higher than in the UK? (and that's saying something)
@marionreynolds7080
@marionreynolds7080 2 жыл бұрын
Confucius said to his emperor - ‘if you want to remain in charge you have to spread the goodies around’.
@StoutProper
@StoutProper 2 жыл бұрын
The impression I get of the elites are grabbing as much as they can now because they know there’s a big economic crash coming
@ruthmccabe3527
@ruthmccabe3527 Жыл бұрын
Yep - they forgot the panem, and have just left us with the circenses. And what a right old bloody circus it is...
@darongardner4294
@darongardner4294 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you it has answered a lot of questions I had.I see it has a opportunity to take society in the new direction it needs to go, sometimes a breakdown of society generates a breakthrough to something new. The systems we have currently don't work and expecting people to live within them may cause them to be prone to failure.For me it's about meeting the needs of all society and not being in this constant state of boom and bust world of the Banking systems.
@550r
@550r 21 күн бұрын
At the end he says we're probably at the turning point and the dystopia won't continue much longer, watching this almost exactly two years later on and dystopia seems to be settling in and making itself comfortable with no sign of leaving.
@BubblegumCrash332
@BubblegumCrash332 3 ай бұрын
I know we can never know but I wonder what the death toll was directly as a result of the collapse of the USSR
@50_Pence
@50_Pence 2 жыл бұрын
The reality is that I'm paying double for something because of the incompetent people in government and the richest are getting richer because of it
@dfgdfg_
@dfgdfg_ 2 жыл бұрын
21:50 "It's also possibly true that the reason you feel bad is because you live in a shitty society."
@roryontour
@roryontour 2 жыл бұрын
This is a great interview and I love Adam Curtis's films. I've learnt a lot about about how the world works from his films but it's his lack of any consistent ideology which makes him, on one hand so great, while simultaneously so limited in his ability to direct his audience. A long conversation jumping from topic to topic in October 22 with almost no reference to escalating poverty or inequality. It's still very obviously a choice between socialism or barbarism. The only realistic solutions will come from leftist economic policies. Regulation taxation and spending is all we've got.
@thegreatdream8427
@thegreatdream8427 Жыл бұрын
Actually, the solution is anarchism. The state is the cause of the problem. The state and the capitalist class are and have always been two sides of a coin. This is why the Russian Revolution was almost immediately corrupted. State socialism fundamentally cannot work; we need to dismantle the state and replace it with a system of bottom-up direct democracy via federated councils of instantly recallable delegates with no power to impose any decisions without a referendum to ratify them. No one can ever be "represented" by another person, and taxation is and has always been theft, as it is not truly consensual - it is imposed from the top down by those same false "representatives". (You cannot consent to let someone else unilaterally tell you what to do - that is self-enslavement.) Also, all regulations in the economy have historically served to enrich the capitalist class further, not to weaken them. I would encourage you to read Kevin Carson's "Studies in Mutualist Political Economy" - he unveils the real history of capitalism and shows how the state is complicit in it - and cannot not be. He also outlines the mutualist (an anarchist tendency which I think has the greatest chance of succeeding in the Western world) vision for economics, which I think is the only viable alternative to capitalism I've ever heard. (Obviously, anarcho-communism is viable on small scales, but it couldn't run a whole country.)
@NoHeartAnthony
@NoHeartAnthony Жыл бұрын
He’s not espousing an ideology, he’s a journalist. And he has numerous times suggested it’s time for the left to act, but there needs to be a new message. Or any message. I’m no Corbynista but look at how he got mangled by the system for flirting with the hard left without getting buy in from the population. There needs to be a story to go along with the new system like he says. We’re waiting for someone to tell that. He is optimistic, I am too but have a feeling things will get a lot worse before they can get better
@jasongray4517
@jasongray4517 11 ай бұрын
​@NoHeartAnthony Corbyn got mangled for his antisemitism and frankly bizarre response to Salisbury. And now he can't bring himself to condemn his 'friends' Hamas, who recently perpetrated the most devastating pogrom since the Holocaust, despite being invited to do so on no fewer than 15 occasions. He was brought low by being bad at politics. There were no dark forces at work.
@dogmatictales
@dogmatictales Жыл бұрын
Great interview. You nailed the skill of giving thoughtful interjections here and there while not interrupting Curtis’ flow.
@TheDrisk
@TheDrisk 2 жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis is my favourite documentarian, and I feel he has the greatest grasp of understanding and articulating the complex world which we live in. I wish politics and political thinkers would utilise this fantastic talent, and help make a better world for us all.
@PASTPRESENTVideo
@PASTPRESENTVideo 2 жыл бұрын
This man got me through lockdown!
@richardpiano9715
@richardpiano9715 2 жыл бұрын
My God - same here!!😂
@broken-channel
@broken-channel 2 жыл бұрын
Adam Curtis has, for the last few decades at least in my mind, defined what is wrong with the the world. Lack of ideas on the way forward. Here's hoping some bright politicians can think about what was said in this documentary and come up with some radical ideas that also unify.
@ND_NB
@ND_NB 2 жыл бұрын
I would be so interested to hear his opinion on the Scottish independence movement.
@crhu319
@crhu319 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn't. If hes too dense to see that they DO have a plan and are the future, just like USSR was carved up by optimists in the Baltics, Georgia...why would have anything useful to say about the Scots?
@themsmloveswar3985
@themsmloveswar3985 Жыл бұрын
Scottish Independence is about one political party promising heaven on earth for political power. The worst thing that could happen to that political movement, would be if the got it. Because they would then be running the most indebted political entity in Europe, due to local debt and a share of UK public debt. The promises would be called out as a bluff. It is just optics.
@ND_NB
@ND_NB Жыл бұрын
@@themsmloveswar3985 There is a long history of this political movement. The wider view informs the modern context, that is why I thought Adam Curtis' opinion would be interesting because he is quite good at piecing together how historical context affects the shape of modern politics.
@youarehere.
@youarehere. Жыл бұрын
13:29 the claim that Gorbachev said “ok we’ll have computers, and that will rescue communism” is the most reductive assessment of Gorbachev ever committed to the public domain. Curtis speaks with an all-knowing and definitive authority about extremely contentious matters. Curtis’s interpretation of people and events are presented as uncomplicated fact. Curtis places himself outside and above the journalistic practice he describes when in fact he is a practitioner of that very practice.
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