Strewth - now we know how quickly a police state can be rolled out. As it will not be rolled all the way back again it is even more necessary to keep our focus on totalitarian trends. For example, here in the early decades of the twenty first
century we have a level of prosperity almost unimaginable only a few generations
ago. Which is fine, there is little point moaning about prosperity, but at what cost have we
arrived here? Because there is always a cost – something we could have aimed
for instead. More research into virus pandemics for instance.
However it is not easy to say what the cost might
have been even with hindsight, but suppose we begin with the 1950s. WWII was
behind us, rationing was fading into history and new freedoms, new technology and
new prosperity appeared to be on the horizon. What should we have done to make
the best of those promises?
In the 1950s we had the death penalty, we
understood the importance of marriage and the nuclear family, we had no mass
immigration and we understood patriotism, we valued education,
self-improvement, integrity and honesty, we respected the law and the police,
we understood the value of inequality, we valued science, technology and
engineering.
Certainly we have to remove the rose-tinted spectacles when
considering such matters. They were by no means universal and were diluted with
numerous caveats and shades of opinion but we also knew that many social and
political radicals were also totalitarians.
Totalitarians eh? Yes – we understood totalitarians
better than we do now. We were emerging from a disastrous world war – of course
we understood totalitarians as people with disastrously repressive political ideals.
Or rather many of us understood totalitarians in that way. Now we don’t because
the totalitarians survived and multiplied.
We became more prosperous and as we became more prosperous the iron fist pulled on a velvet glove so we became more tolerant towards totalitarian politics. Young people dabbled in it as they always do, but unfortunately many seem to have encountered no reason to let go, no reason to put aside the toys of childhood. In a complex world simplicity appeals.
We became more prosperous and as we became more prosperous the iron fist pulled on a velvet glove so we became more tolerant towards totalitarian politics. Young people dabbled in it as they always do, but unfortunately many seem to have encountered no reason to let go, no reason to put aside the toys of childhood. In a complex world simplicity appeals.
Now there are numerous prominent totalitarians in
public life but we don’t recognise them as such. Totalitarians have become commonplace,
invisible. Climate change is totalitarian politics where we have discovered something amazing - even the climate, even the natural world can be used to promote a thoroughly totalitarian political ethos. Or rather we haven't discovered it - merely some of us have.
In their different ways Jeremy
Corbyn and Prince Charles are totalitarians but millions do not see it. Prince
Harry is an environmental totalitarian, numerous celebrities are totalitarians.
Earlier generations would perhaps have recognised them as such, seeing the signs, the moral rot. Not now.
3 comments:
Good post, AKH.
I think one issue here is that in the past - just after the war, for example - nobody was asked their opinion, and more importantly there were extremely limited opportunities for expressing it. Opinions, particularly inside echo chambers, tend to gravitate towards the simplistic and all-inclusive and - well, the totalitarian. Once we made it legitimate and even desirable for ordinary people to have and express opinions, off we went. Those "demons" from yesterday's post gradually emerged. They were the emergent properties of many people pinging ideas off each other, and people ended up stuck in the corners, where they can't see anything, and they can't get out.
As ever, the answer is to subvert, to criticise, particularly in ways they don't welcome, and to take the piss. I don't think it has to be dramatic, like that Tiananman Square bloke stopping the tank. Just let coppers, officials, and members of the public know we are still here, and that they are behaving like complete tits.
Remember that, in Cambridgeshire, you can enjoy the clement weather in your garden or indoors with the window open. No cruising down the river in these times of strife
Sam - thanks and well put:-
"They were the emergent properties of many people pinging ideas off each other, and people ended up stuck in the corners, where they can't see anything, and they can't get out."
I have a draft post along similar lines but it needs some work because of the historical aspect. We change and the change isn't seen until we have a memory of it. Often not even then.
Graeme - here in Derbyshire it was too chilly for the garden. The lockdown has also made going out less appealing somehow.
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