What keeps the brake on our anger? Surely we ought
to be angry?
The scandal of MP’s expenses – widespread petty and not so
petty thieving by our elected representatives. The paedophile cover-up stories
which never show any prospect of drying up.
Endless lying, hopelessly complex taxes, petty bureaucracy,
incompetence, crony capitalism, crony socialism, crony salaries, crony payoffs,
crony sinecures, fake charities, 24/7 nagging by armies of petty officials and
a democracy which crumbled away to dust years ago. Even our children are no
longer ours – they belong to the state.
Why don’t we strike back? Why have we limited our anger to a
pathetic flurry of UKIP votes in EU elections which don’t matter anyway? Why do we
dutifully recycle rubbish when we know it’s a waste of our time? Why do we put
up with so much genuine rubbish, so many wasted opportunities, so much lying by an
endemically dishonest and immoral ruling class?
Why are we not angry?
I think there may be a number of factors, but one may be biological.
We are hunter-gatherers who no longer hunt and gather. Victims of our own
success, perhaps we simply have too much food and it’s sapping our intellectual
drive, turning us into lotus-eaters. Maybe cheap and plentiful food is wrecking
our ancient hunter-gatherer instincts, our nose for threats, our ability to weigh options accurately, even our need
to weigh options accurately.
Perhaps it’s not so much a question of being overweight as a
question of belief. We no longer entertain even the faintest whiff of a doubt
about where our next meal will come from. Not so long ago, even the local
squire could fall on hard times if harvests failed. Not now.
I recall my great uncle telling us how his family used to
catch and eat sparrows. My father-in-law’s family used to pass a single boiled
egg around the table, but those days are gone and even their memory has
almost faded away.
So maybe basic biology is working against us.
Look around and think about it for a moment. Lots of cheap
food isn’t just making us fat, but perhaps it is also making us astonishingly complacent.
With the guarantee of food in our bellies we just don’t care. We’ve lost the
ability to care, the stimulus of survival, the need for security. We’ve lost even
the faintest scintilla of uncertainty as to where the next meal might come
from.
So maybe it's the bread - we already know about the circuses.
If biology is this significant, then what we are up against
is not resolvable because it isn’t an issue where we can reason ourselves into
a better situation. We can’t meddle with our own biology and recreate the
inventive spectre of hunger which brought us here. We don't want to recreate it either - why would we?
It works the other way round too of course. The elite don’t
care either, but then they rarely did – their bellies were always full.
5 comments:
Yes, bread and circuses - and for the moment, absence of revolutionary leadership from the middle class. I think the trouble may come when the middle class finally gets stuffed.
I am sure a lot of people are angry but lack a coherent sense of why or what to do about it. We don't have the social infrastructure to re-run a Jarrow march. Anyway, what are we angry about? Certainly traditional freedoms are being curtailed and incompetence and lying are more obvious but to my mind it's the economy really. In response the parasitic professions seem on the rise but I suspect these are a result of planned makework schemes to create loyalty and make us a little wary of dissent.
So what do we want to change, the system or the economy? I doubt economic realities can be changed from here so it's the system - make 'They Work for Us' something other than a sick joke.
I think that disruptive voting would be a good protest - simply avoid voting for the incumbent party even if they seem tolerably OK. Vote to disrupt safe seats even if you must hold your nose. Need to be a bit smarter than just 'UKIP'. Plan to disrupt voting patterns such that parties face an unpredictable hit who's only reply is to wait impotently until the next election. Another is to encourage the young to vote - and get them to give the parties a hard time. The tools and media are easily available and would be dangerous to interfere with. Hit where it hurts - in the pocket - until they get the message.
Sackers - at least we'd see some anger I suppose, although where it could take us I don't know.
Roger - disruptive voting would work if large numbers were to give it a try. That's the issue for me - I don't see anything but mild dissatisfaction and a vast amount of ignorance.
People just don't make the effort. Most probably don't even know what global warming is all about.
Many are angry but don't know how to channel it, whom to kill.
James - the trouble is, many aren't really angry, just annoyed every now and then.
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