Posts Tagged ‘politics’

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 our  chintzy head-of-state and left prostrate, quite unable to strive or let our wings take dream.

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Exhibit #9 Fahrenheit 9/11

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

If there was a turning point in the noughties – a moment that we can point to as the decade’s fulcrum – the gravitational mass weighing on the rubber sheet of goodness pulling it all down into the y axis of shit – then it has to be the re-election of George W. Bush in 2004.

Not because I especially hated George Bush – I hated him a normal amount – and not because of any ridiculous anti-americanism that paints George Bush as a worse leader than the tyrants and terrorists: The problem with George Bush’s unequivocal, uncontested trouncing of John Kerry was the way it just left everything feeling hopeless. Scared beat clever. Swiftboating beat arguing. Religion beat, well… pretend religion. It was almost as if The West Wing wasn’t an accurate reflection of reality – a notion I refuse to entertain.

There was nothing to cling to. No hanging chads or false consciousness – just the truth: that everybody in the world was pissed off with everybody else and that nobody cared too much to hide it.

And, just to make it worse, was the horrible realisation that lots of us had gone along with Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 and were now tainted with the same shit as the winners and consequently were unable even to enjoy the moral highground once everything started to fall apart.

We’d ignored the mawkish sentimentality, logical contortions and crude demagoguery. We’d plugged it, discussed it, even paid money to see it. We’d sat back and taken it while Michael Moore argued that it was awful that black people were being sent to die in a war while simultaneously arguing that more troops needed to be sent to die in a war. We’d lapped up the carefully worded innuendos about the ‘white house’ arranging for members of the Bin Laden family to be flown out of the US after 9/11, even though Richard Clarke had taken sole responsibility for the 9/20 flight before the film went on general release.

We’d watched this bit, where, without captions to tell you who we’re actually looking at and with only the most cursory, barely connected nod to ‘human rights’ at the end – we are shown an extended pop video of White house staff and Bush family members standing next to people who look foreign and scary.

Are we supposed to recognise all these carry on up the khyber-style Arabs? Which ones are the ones that gave the money? Which ones did the human rights abuses? It doesn’t make a blind bit of difference – this is just an appeal to racism that can barely even be bothered to dress itself up as anything else – and we all lay back and took it.

We nodded along with slackjawed approval as he intruded on people’s grief, presented pre-war Iraq as a happy land of swingsets and hobbits, used every tabloid trick imaginable to manipulate us… and it didn’t even fucking work.

If it had done what it was supposed to – if it had reached a large enough audience of middle ground voters to swing the election – then it would still have been a horrible, greetings card mockery of an argument but at least it wouldn’t have mattered. As it was, Bush got re-elected anyway, and the Limbaughs and Hannitys and Coulters could walk around with a new air of smugness, happy in the knowledge that, however much you lower the bar, there will always be some fat fucker willing to limbo under it.

The noughties saw us forget that our enemy’s enemies are not necessarily our friends. It’s a lesson we should try to remember.

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Exhibit #5 Gooooooordon Browwwwwwwn

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

The thing about Gordon Brown is that he is very able. He is very competent. He works very hard. He’s probably decent and upstanding and reliable. He’s good with figures. He’s good at securing the loyalty of those in his debt. Unfortunately, none of these come close to being qualities anyone would want in the leader of a nation.

gordon-brown

Because, and bear with me, say what you like about Blair or Thatcher but you’ve got to admit they had style. They had drama. Remember Blair’s wounded, arrow pierced eyes when people started to gang up on him about the wars? Remember ‘A new dawn has broken, has it not?’ The IRA blew Margaret Thatcher up and she was still back at the podium being evil within 6 hours. Even John Major had a pinteresque tragedy about him – a ghost of greyish ectoplasm drifting folornly through the swamp of bastards. These were leaders fit for purpose. Fit to be caricatured, fit to be impersonated, fit – even – to be hated, as is our right and need.

But not Gordon Brown. You can’t really hate him. It’d be like hating a middle aged tramp wafting a barely perceptible trace of sour milk through the newspaper section of a public library. You don’t want him there, no one wants him there, but you feel bad because it’s cold outside and doesn’t he deserve this small mercy? so you just tolerate his presence because that is what libraries have always been like. It’s uncomfortable. You don’t know where to look. Eventually you just leave.

He doesn’t seem like a bad man, he doesn’t seem good, he just seems to have no idea what people are like. Of course the British say that they believe in hard work and quiet dignity, but they don’t really mean it – they want to be told they’re working hard so they’ve got something to complain about while skiving or taking their pants off in the street. Gordon Brown though, he really believes that hard work and quiet dignity are good things and his public face is perpetually misjudged as a result. He doesn’t get it. He can’t lead. He is the Peter Principle embodied – a man promoted to the level of his own incompetence. It’s just crushing and awful, like a council terrace cul-de- sacced at both ends.

There are things to actively dislike, of course. The problem he seems to have with women, the sense that he is reacting to events rather than shaping them, the contempt for democracy that manifests itself as his appearing to treat the will of the people as little more than a minor variable in the broader calculations of policy and politics. But, whereas with Blair you could always just shout in his face, with Brown you’re just, like, well… it’s not his fault he smells of sour milk and he has worked very hard…

He’s emblematic of noughties Britain. It was a decade of squandered promise. Our lovely, shiny, exciting Labour government all spoiled and gone rubbish like our lovely, exciting future all broken and gone depressing. And, just to relieve the tension, we’re now going to elect the Tories again, because we really are that stupid.

Gordon’s right, we are a minor variable and an utterly predictable one at that.

Watch this, it’ll cheer you up, then make you sad again later:

www.weebls-stuff.com/toons/Gordon/

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Exhibit #4 Nobody Inventing Nuclear Fusion… Again!

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

John F. Kennedy, speaking in 1961,  announced to a divided but hopeful world, that,

“I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth.”

Of course, we are noughties people, and noughties people are nothing if not prone to scoffing cynicism – so we may well react to this by damning the cold war; by making a ham-fisted ‘joke’ about American imperialism not being limited to the earth, yeah?; by bringing up the faltering sense of decline at NASA since the sixties…

But stop it – you grow dull and predictable in your received opinions. The only thing that really matters about the Kennedy moon speech is that it worked. He staked the pride of a nation on a single goal – and that goal was achieved. And the people who were too busy having sexy parties to bother writing trivial list-based pseudo-journalism at the end of the sixties could afford to do so with smiles on their faces. Sure, there was all that unpleasantness in Southeast Asia, but we went to the fucking moon. Score draw.

Imagine, if you will, an alternative noughties where a visionary young president had reacted to the horror of 9/11 by bringing back the best of the cold war mentality and making an enormously ambitious declaration of purpose.

My Fellow Americans

He’d have said

Today we have been attacked by massive dicks, and believe me, if I ever get my hands on them I will fuck them up. But while the sense of grief compels us to reorder the world, we will respond to the challenge of this day by looking not to the path of hate but to the future, to the continued greatness of this union, and to a day when we can look back on these first years of the 21st century not as a time of ending, but of renewal, of a new beginning for America. It is to this end that here, today, I announce this bold new commitment. By January 1st 2015, as God is our witness, we will have invented all of the technology required to make Back To The Future… Part II a reality.

Because – right – why hasn’t that film been a guiding principle of western governments’ science funding policies ever since it came out?

It was a very popular film.

If we get to 2015 without pizza-rehydrating, hoverboards, hover conversions, holographic 3D projection, drug-free sleep guns and bionic bullying implants a palpable sense of disappointment and despondency will seep through our civilisation like a disease. Sure, not everyone will make the connection, but deep in our augmented cultural psyches we will know. We will look out at the world through jaded eyes, crushed in some small, eternal way by the knowledge. We will cease to believe in our ability to invent, to evolve, to effect change – you think the credit crunch was bad? you wait.

We have wasted the legacy of Back To The Future… Part II in the noughties. While we were panicking about flus that never happened and disasters that never came, we could have been designing the talking jacket, we could have been making all those Jaws sequels, we could have been pouring public money into any area of research with the potential to harness the power of cold fusion, solve the world’s energy crisis, end pollution and global warming and give us those little Mr. Fusion things that make your car run on fag ends and banana skins.

Epic fail, western civilisation. Epic, epic fail.

Build Your Own Mr. Fusion and Gasify Your Car With Garbage - from Gizmodo

Build Your Own Mr. Fusion and Gasify Your Car With Garbage - from Gizmodo

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Exhibit #1 Jamie Oliver Was Massive In The Noughties

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

After losing his job as the David Mellor puppet for Spitting Image, Jamie Oliver turned to the lower end of professional cooking – working the fry station at smug London eatery, the River Cafe. It was there he was ’spotted’ and given the lead role in a supremely irritating 1999 cookery show ‘The Naked Chef’ where he slid down his bannister, rode a cunty moped and delighted both palate and eye with audacious culinary creations – like his ‘whole fried breakfast in a pan’ – which he then served to twats.

His ascension heralded the rise of the typical noughties man – a perrenially teenage, happy-go-lucky, inoffensive arse with a thoroughly professional approach to his creative endeavours. He rendered the time-honoured superlative ‘he’d sell his own grandmother’ obsolete in 2000 by actually selling his own grandmother to the Sainsbury’s supermarket chain for $2,000,000, all the while referring to innocent bystanders as ‘darlin’ and using the word ‘pukka’ with impunity.

Sensing that he was on the crest of a wave, Oliver decided to test the extent of the possible in the sphere of public irritation by embarking on a series of highly lucrative stunts designed to reinforce his image as the organic Jesus. First, he drew on his own life experience by taking 15 commoners and showing them that, with a simple combination of dishwashing and appearing on television, they could enter a life of poorly paid grunt work in the service industries. Then he started telling everybody what to eat and travelling around the world calling innocent foreigners of every colour and creed ‘treacle’.

He was voted “Most Inspiring Political Figure of 2005,” according to a Channel 4 News annual viewer poll.

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