Posts Tagged ‘lady sovereign’

Exhibit #13 Still Having A Monarchy

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

The thing about the noughties that really sucked was the general sense that progress had been expected but that it had not been made. This was, after all, the Twenty-First century, the blackjack of centuries, the century when all the busts and unwelcome face cards of the twentieth century’s unceasing quests to double down and gamble were supposed to be paid off by a series of glorious, jetpack-fuelled tricks.

Why can’t I buy a delicious roast dinner in pill form? Why can I only plan a holiday in space if I’m willing to pay Richard Branson $200,000 for a half hour excursion? Why are people still working in supermarkets? In the sixties, people used to say that ‘millions now living may never die’ – in the noughties they just repeat some half-baked platitude about not wanting to live forever that they heard a c-list comedian say in the big brother jacuzzi because that is, literally, the full extent of their intellectual and philosophical ambition. In Britain especially, we’ve given up on the future because the future arrived and it was fucking orange.

Compounding the sense of dignity crushing futility is the fact that – when we sit down and take a long look at ourselves, our society and our place in the world – we have to acknowledge that all three are still, after all this time, still firmly underneath some onion-faced old lady who got to where she was by being born there.

The monarchy, the god damned fucking monarchy.

Of course this doesn’t feel like the future we were promised – you can’t live in a future with a queen unless that queen is wearing a silver bikini and is half wasp.

Issue 1, 2000 AD

Issue 1, 2000 AD

When the first issue of 2000 AD rolled off the seventies presses and the young of the discontented winters paused to daydream of a Utopian and impossibly distant century, they might not have explicitly erased the monarchy from the picture – but it was a necessary assumption. A monarchy would be as out of place in the brave new world as burnt rock cakes or nicotine-stained net curtains. Its Abolition was a prerequisite for any kind of progress.

Perhaps because it was always so obvious that it would be gotten rid of at some point, no one ever actually got around to getting rid of it.

Instead, mind blowingly stupid arguments – “she does a good job though, dun’t she, the queen?” and “it’s good for tourism…” (as if the lack of actual torture victims and inmates had dented the profits of the Tower of London) – were allowed to waft fart-like and uncontradicted until they condensed into an intellectual shit-hive that was more than capable of resisting any advocate of change.

This has left us with a horrible paradox in received opinion: everybody knows that the hereditary principle is ridiculous but everybody also knows that there’s no need to abolish the monarchy. It is stupid and embarrassing. And it is retarding us as a nation as we languish, constrained by ourĀ  chintzy head-of-state and left prostrate, quite unable to strive or let our wings take dream.

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Exhibit #7 Chavs

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

In the UK, there has developed a kind of sickening underclass in the last decade.

Economically valueless, they work – when they work at all – in industries that have been rendered more or less obsolete by the march of progress. They are perennially drunk and have loud screechy voices drawing unwarranted attention to their tasteless outfits and rough, bitterness-chiseled faces.

Motivated only by spite, rage and an animalistic lust for undeserved monetary reward, they lazily gorge themselves on a diet of celebrity gossip, fads and irrational fear. They prefer the rule of the mob to that of law. They are criminally ignorant. They breed nasty, unvaccinated, disease ridden children. They lie around at home – producing nothing of value – and dragging the whole intellectual life of our nation into a scuzzy, ugly, acquisitive quagmire with their vile, toxic presence.

They are, of course, Columnists; and to have to read them picking on the working class because some unpaid work-experience girl showed them urbandictionary.com and gave them tenuous permission has been one of this shit decade’s true horrors.

What kind of generation listens to Lily Allen when Lady Sovereign exists? A shit one, that’s what. A bullied generation. A gang of needy, whining victims floating in a sea of their own equally valid opinions.

It’s no good. If you’re among the chattering classes, you’re supposed to feel embarrassed about your background. You’re supposed to know, deep down, that those potent, erect, bastards who intimidated you at the bus stop were right to humiliate and damage your fragile little ego – it is the only justice achievable in an imperfect world. You’re supposed to get over it, realise your limitations and acknowledge that there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in St. Cuthbert’s reformed academy of Philosophy. You are not supposed to seize on a bit of playground slang and use it as a means of segmenting and distancing yourself from people you’re scared of. You’re not supposed to be comfortable.

The noughties saw the end of middle class shame, but we needed that shame. It was the only thing that stopped us being insufferable little prigs.

Here, watch Lady Sovereign’s fucking brilliant Hoodie video while punching yourself:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNx1YCIGWQs&feature=related

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