The endless quest of a not-quite-writer and almost-musician to try and create something of worth in a fight against procrastination, cider and a never-ending merry go round of pets. Follow this to find out how not to finish anything you start.
Saturday 25 June 2016
I came home angry and drunk and wrote a thing about Brexit (sorry for saying Brexit)
“Vimes
had once discussed the Ephebian idea of ‘democracy’ with Carrot,
and had been rather interested in the idea that everyone had a vote
until he found out that while he, Vimes, would have a vote, there was
no way in the rules that anyone could prevent Nobby Nobbs from having
one as well. Vimes could see the flaw there straight away.”
If
you are a fan of the Discworld novels, then this quote will probably
come to mind every time you go to vote in an election. It certainly
rattled round my head a lot on Thursday and Friday during the
referendum. However much I disagree with the Leave campaign, they
have won, and I have to find a way to make a positive out of that. It
has been a bitter, divisive and awful campaign that has torn apart
friends and families; I know of at least 4 people who have unfriended
each other on facebook (oh my god! The horror!) and will probably
never talk to each other again.
Of
course, the low point of all this was the assassination of Jo Cox.
However anybody tries to spin it, this was an act of political
terrorism, just because Tommy Mair wasn't part of any formal
organisation, he claimed allegiance to the leave campaign and called
Mrs Cox a traitor. That makes him as much a terrorist as Omar
Mateen, the Orlando
shooter. And
yet still, even after this awfulness, people were calling anybody
wanting to vote remain a traitor (including the guy I had this infamous argument with once), while those on the other side were
calling anyone wanting to leave, for whatever reason, racists and
fascists and bigots. I am just glad it's all over now, and I hope we
can heal the fractures running through society.
Even
the Leave campaign didn't expect to win. I realise that that sounds
insane, but it is the only thing that makes sense. Farage came out
apologetically, and all those Tory MPs wrote that letter saying they
wanted Cameron to stay. He didn't and their bet was safe anyway. I
have spent the day trying to come to terms with the result. I can
live with the leave vote, I can accept that we will leave the EU. I
have a problem with what happens next.
My
problem is that nothing will change. My problem is that the angry
people who have voted against the unequal, fucking dreadful status
quo have been lied to, and short changed. My problem is that the
people who woke up this morning happy that their children's future
was brighter and better, and filled with a well funded NHS, houses
for all, and jobs with living wages for anyone willing to put in a
day's graft will be thoroughly disappointed. I was told that 'no
fucking Europeans' would be telling us what to do now, despite the
fact that, as far as I am aware, none were anyway. And then when I
suggested that the bastards would always win, that 'at least they
were our bastards'. Hoorah for the brits, yay Jingoism. What the fuck
does it matter where a cunt comes from, he is still a cunt. I meant
Rupert Murdoch when I mentioned the bastards anyway, and he's
definitely not one of 'ours', whatever 'ours' means.
I
have never wanted to be wrong more in my life, and I would like you
to send me this piece in five years time and tell me how wrong I was,
and that Brexit (which is not a biscuit) was the best thing ever to
happen in the history of England. (For surely, the United Kingdom is
now utterly fucked, Scotland will get their second referendum, they
will leave, and wonderfully, the IRA seem to be making vague
mutterings about a United Ireland again, I can only apologise to
Wales for dragging them down with us, but we are England again, have
no doubt about that. I hope the woman shouting 'this is our England!'
on the news is happy now.)
The
call for a second referendum is utterly futile as well. I laughed
when Nigel Farage suggested that in the event of a 52/48 split
against him then he would push for another referendum. It would be
utterly disingenuous of me to suggest that it's ok for my side to do
it.
I
have heard from left-leaning friends of mine how they see our new,
bright future, and I love what my friend Steve Carter said :-
“On
a deep level, the universe is about change and in change lies
potential; potential for good or bad but change is what we have
chosen and we now have a real and palpable opportunity for change. I
think this is the first step in a long process of seeing good change
to our democracy. We have just said no to unelected bodies that
govern us so I now see the writing on the wall for the Lords in it's
current form - that has to change but it will take time. We also
remove the umph of the UK flag wavers - of course, the Scottish will
be flag waving. I expect the forces within the Labour party to
mobilise a real offence on the Tories but fear they may end up back
stabbing internally for a while. We are now blessed with a global
communication system and a much more liberal social outlook. People
are conscious of the environment and our place within a global
society so I do not see a swing to the right. I think we will see a
knee jerk to the left and I hope we have a GE soon. However maybe we
need some stability for the next couple of years. We have laws in
place for rights and the environment and I see nothing changing any
time soon in that regard. It is up to us to write to our MPs, go
demonstrating and make our voices heard. Only apathy we lead us to
nothing positive
and there are 48% who have woken up fuming today so hopefully they
will be vocal. Today is a good day for democracy. The EU, for all
it's good points, is far from a shining light for democracy.”
and
if we were exiting under a different administration, I might have his
hope, I
certainly don't disagree with him fundamentally, but I'm a pragmatist
and
we have done this under a government who are a fair bit right of
Thatcher. I
don't think
we're doing Progrexit.
I
am also once again proper cross with the BBC. I am certain that there
are decent, well-educated, sensible people voting leave. The
statistics bear that out if nothing else. But all the coverage shows
angry people shouting 'immigrants' and waving flags with no coherent
argument to back them up. Equally, there must be incoherent fuckwits
voting remain, but the media's 'story' is only showing the middle
class, lentil weaving graduates arguing some philosophical point or
another. Never before have I felt so much like we were being
deliberately manipulated in a 'divide and rule' kind of way. Fuck
your story, this is real life, don't pit whole communities against
each other. Now, more than ever, we need to be united in our intent.
Angry sink estates need to work with the intellectual wankers (I have
never felt more like an overgrown Adrian Mole in my life than writing
this paragraph) and overcome your prejudice. Inequality is everyone's
problem, and somebody somewhere is using it to keep us distracted and
fighting each other when we should be having a proper fucking
revolution.
I
am no expert, and I am still fairly sure that sovereignty is an
abstract concept unless you want to be in North Korea or Russia, but
I can't see how it makes any difference in the real world. It's
not often I agree with Alastair Campbell, but when he says that we
elect other people to understand the complicated stuff and make
decisions for us, I think he's right. I don't pretend to know how to
write a budget, or run a government department anymore than Tony
Blair could write a
really funny song about a cat leaving headless bodies all over the
house, or some lengthy
pointless bollocks about looking at naked pictures of Prince.
Referendums are largely a bad idea.
Nobody
is actually going to stop immigration. We need it to keep the country
going. Wages are not going to go up even if all the immigrant labour
goes back home tomorrow. Austerity will carry on, rich wankers will
continue to own more property than they can live in and homes will
continue to be for profit, not living in. Look at all the big empty
towers of London. Company profits will continue to go towards
dividends while the people doing the work are told they can't be paid
more because of the Romanians willing to do it for less. Outside of
the EU, or inside the EU, the people in charge are the same people,
and there are less other people watching them now. It will be bitter
to watch the same people still suffering even when the cheap foreign
labour has been deported, after they have been given false hope
today, and I will take no joy in telling them I told them so (I will
still tell them I told you so though).
You
have been sold a scapegoat, it will take you years to realise it, and
I hope to god that I am wrong and you get to tell me to my face.
Capitalism is your enemy, and a lack of investment. EU regulations do
not stop nationalisation, which would solve a huge amount of problems
in at
least a
couple of industries. Thatcher sold us all a lie along the lines of
the 'american dream', Blair and Cameron have run with it, and now we
are all accepting of the Capitalist nightmare, and that the laws of
economics are the same as the laws of physics. When
the blinkers come off, I will be at the barricades with you, and I
will stay your hand at the guillotine. I would like a truly bloodless
revolution, (the less said about Farage's
tasteless bullet comments the better) and a truly fairer society.
As
an anarchist, and no respecter of borders, laws or conventions, today
should have been water off a duck's back to me. But I do not like to
see people duped, and I do not like to think of where they will throw
the blame in five years time when things are no better for them.
Also, I have ducks, and they hate the fucking rain like everybody
else. Like Jo Cox (who I knew little about before her assassination,
and cried over for a whole day) said “we are far more united and
have far more in common with each other than things that divide us.”
Just like me and my ducks.
Don't listen to the bullshit, look with your eyes.
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