I wished to believe myself
angry, but really I was afraid; fear and anger in me are very much the same. A
friend of mine, a bit of a poet, sir, once called them ‘the two black wings of
self.’ And so they are, so they are...!
Crude it may be, but to my mind the
Scottish referendum is well summed up as a battle between fear and anger - the two black wings of self. The
Yes camp was angry with Westminster and the No camp fearful of change. Both strove mightily to stoke their emotional engines but fear always had the edge. We live in a fearful age.
The AV vote referendum was much the same and there is no reason to
suppose an EU referendum would be any different. The establishment
knows how to use the endless subtle pressures of fear, knows too well how
potent they are.
In any event it isn’t easy to whip up anger over
abstractions such as democracy, accountability or even lying and corruption. For one think, angry criticism is being choked off by the pervasive pressures of political correctness. An intemperate outburst could have the police knocking on your door, an association of ideas which is surely deliberate. Expect more of the same.
So angry words are being squeezed from our language. Not primarily
because they offend, although that is the official narrative, but because anger
has far too many political hazards for a morally corrupt establishment. Anger rocks the boat - fear doesn't.
To a large degree I think we have the BBC to thank for this
deplorable state of affairs. That and our collective laziness. Fear of change
saturates BBC output. Not overtly, but covertly in an endless unwillingness to
engage with anything genuinely radical.
Comedy and satire are fine as long as they don't quite hit the target, but
any serious challenge to the status quo is always beyond the BBC pale. The abode of extremists. A fearful
place where decent folk never go. Room 101.
To my mind the important message is one we knew already. It
is better to vote against the big three parties than to expect Cameron
to deliver a fairly contested referendum. He knows the value of fear and
probably knew he was unlikely to lose Scotland. He also knows he is unlikely to
lose the EU if voters are foolish enough to trust him.
4 comments:
Move the BBC to Scotland. Alloa would be just the place for it.
Demetrius - or even further. St Kilda sounds about right.
Nice take, AKH. I'm exhausted.
James - thanks, so am I. Time for other things.
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