War and Shopping: The Extremism That Never Speaks Its Name
John Pilger @ Truthout - Looking for a bookshop that was no longer there, I walked instead into a
labyrinth designed as a trap. Leaving became an illusion, rather like
Alice once she had stepped through the looking glass. Walls of glass
curved into concentric circles as one "store" merged into another:
Armani Exchange with Dinki Di Pies. Exits led to gauntlets of more
"offers" and "exciting options." Seeking a guide, I bought a lousy pair
of sunglasses: anything to get out. It was a vision of hell. It was a
Westfield mega mall.
This happened in Sydney - where the Westfield empire began - in a
"mall" not half as mega as the one that opened in Stratford, East
London, on 13 September. "Everything" is here, reported the
architectural critic Jonathan Glancey: from Apple to Primark,
McDonalds's to KFC and Krispy Kreme. There is a cinema with 17 screens
and "luxurious VIP seats," and a mega "luxury" bowling alley. Tracey
Emin and Mary Portas lead the Westfield "cultural team." The biggest
casino in the land will overlook a "24-hour lifestyle street" called The
Arcade. This will be the only way into the 2012 Olympic Games for ten
million people attending the athletics. The simple, grotesque message of
"buy me, buy me" will be London's welcome to the world. Read more.
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