Brian's reflection upon the year 2016/2017
In full for those without Facebook . . . . . . .or like me those contemplating leaving it
2016/2017
The consensus among most of my
friends seems to be that 2016 was a terrible year, and the beginning of a long
decline into something we don’t even want to imagine.
2016 was indeed a pretty rough
year, but I wonder if it’s the end - not the beginning - of a long decline. Or
at least the beginning of the end….for I think we’ve been in decline for about
40 years, enduring a slow process of de-civilisation, but not really quite
noticing it until now. I’m reminded of that thing about the frog placed in a
pan of slowly heating water…
This decline includes the
transition from secure employment to precarious employment, the destruction of
unions and the shrinkage of workers’ rights, zero hour contracts, the
dismantling of local government, a health service falling apart, an underfunded
education system ruled by meaningless exam results and league tables, the
increasingly acceptable stigmatisation of immigrants, knee-jerk nationalism,
and the concentration of prejudice enabled by social media and the internet.
This process of decivilisation
grew out of an ideology which sneered at social generosity and championed a
sort of righteous selfishness. (Thatcher: “Poverty is a personality defect”.
Ayn Rand: “Altruism is evil”). The emphasis on unrestrained individualism has
had two effects: the creation of a huge amount of wealth, and the funnelling of
it into fewer and fewer hands. Right now the 62 richest people in the world are
as wealthy as the bottom half of its population combined. The Thatcher/Reagan
fantasy that all this wealth would ‘trickle down’ and enrich everybody else
simply hasn’t transpired. In fact the reverse has happened: the real wages of
most people have been in decline for at least two decades, while at the same
time their prospects - and the prospects for their children - look dimmer and
dimmer. No wonder people are angry, and turning away from business-as-usual
government for solutions. When governments pay most attention to whoever has
most money, the huge wealth inequalities we now see make a mockery of the idea
of democracy. As George Monbiot said: “The pen may be mightier than the sword,
but the purse is mightier than the pen”.
Last year people started waking
up to this. A lot of them, in their anger, grabbed the nearest Trump-like
object and hit the Establishment over the head with it. But those were just the
most conspicuous, media-tasty awakenings. Meanwhile there’s been a quieter but
equally powerful stirring: people are rethinking what democracy means, what society
means and what we need to do to make them work again. People are thinking hard,
and, most importantly, thinking out loud, together. I think we underwent a mass
disillusionment in 2016, and finally realised it’s time to jump out of the
saucepan.
This is the start of something
big. It will involve engagement: not just tweets and likes and swipes, but
thoughtful and creative social and political action too. It will involve
realising that some things we’ve taken for granted - some semblance of truth in
reporting, for example - can no longer be expected for free. If we want good
reporting and good analysis, we’ll have to pay for it. That means MONEY: direct
financial support for the publications and websites struggling to tell the
non-corporate, non-establishment side of the story. In the same way if we want
happy and creative children we need to take charge of education, not leave it
to ideologues and bottom-liners. If we want social generosity, then we must pay
our taxes and get rid of our tax havens. And if we want thoughtful politicians,
we should stop supporting merely charismatic ones.
Inequality eats away at the heart
of a society, breeding disdain, resentment, envy, suspicion, bullying,
arrogance and callousness. If we want any decent kind of future we have to push
away from that, and I think we’re starting to.
There’s so much to do, so many
possibilities. 2017 should be a surprising year.
- Brian
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