Now the Pope has gone home, the left needs to rediscover the courage of its convictions.
The atmosphere amongst the liberal left in the aftermath of the Pope's state visit to Britain calls to mind the uncomfortable eye-avoidance that takes place after someone suddenly turns the lights on at an orgy. Yes, we had a lot of fun, and we probably got rather carried away, but we're not overly keen to discuss it the next morning and we might well hesitate before leaping into any more messy entanglements with gay rights, feminism and anti-state activism.
The protest itself was a joyful chorus of self-congratulatory liberal paralysis. As bagfuls of naughty blown-up condoms floated up into an azure Piccadilly sky, central London thundered with the sound of twenty thousand broadly centre-left Britons failing to make up their minds about why they were there. Some of the printed-out slogans bemoaned the extra public expense of lugging the Popemobile around the country; some complained about homophobia, others about the oppression of women, but never too impolitely. There was, in fact, a horrific delicacy about this collective mumble, as if to make any real, overarching complaint about regressive state and religious indoctrination would be, well, a little tasteless.
'It's fantastic that there's a protest," said queer theorist James Butler, who I met in the crowd, "but it's telling that the only thing being chanted with any enthusiasm is 'Pope Go Home!' That sentiment seems less about creating real change than registering a formal objection while retaining the status quo."
Well, the Pope has now gone home, as he was always planning to. Hurrah. Well done us. Unfortunately, homophobia, misogyny, bigotry, intolerance and abuse have not gone home with the Pope.
The impulse towards egalitarianism and collective rationality that nominally brought twenty thousand liberals to Piccadilly last week should not now be permitted to disperse like incense in an empty church. It's vital that the left remembers that for many of us, there was more to this demonstration than the chance to stand around central London wearing pink paper mitres and making unhelpful jokes about men in dresses.
Even more dispiriting than the silly-hat brigade was the peevish fixation, by way of speeches, slogans and placards, on the cost of the Papal visit. Even Peter Tatchell and the Secular Society chose to focus attention on the twelve million pound bill to the state, in this new age of austerity, seemingly in order to rally the disparate strands of popular anti-papism into one miserly chorus of public annoyance.
This type of shoddy reasoning panders entirely to the clunky conservative line on the necessity of public sector cuts, and implies that, in this instance, liberal Britain would have been entirely happy to host the anointed head of an organisation which has covered up institutional child-rape, opposed women's rights and promoted homophobia across the globe if only it hadn't been so jolly expensive....[read the rest at New Statesman]
Good article! Kudos!
ReplyDeleteI disagree with one thing, so I'm not sure I will bother clicking on the rest. In Peter Tatchell's documentary, he covered a LOT of ground. He is a great guy and his health hasn't been great since he got beaten up by a bunch of fascists, and then another bunch of fascists. Give him a break, he's a national treasure.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1315501/Prostitution-How-did-oldest-profession-career-choice-middle-class-girls.html
ReplyDeleteI thought you might enjoy this. This was my favourite bit:
"Prostitution, accordingly, looks like joining the list of behaviour once viewed with disapproval - sex outside marriage, children born out of wedlock, homosexuality - but which has now become a ' lifestyle choice."
So the pope preaches against homosexuality. I am homosexual, I can understand people don't approve. I view homosexuality as something that nature does, real men like to play around, spread their seed with different women. Whereas women want a stable family to bring up their children, that's why they nearly always forgive men who play around. Homosexual men play a useful role in society, they don't try to chase women, so their are more women available for men who want mistresses. Given the choice I'd rather not be homosexual, but it's my nature and I understand why evolution produces homosexuals. The Pope's criticisms I can take, it is muslim violence that I fear.
ReplyDeleteUltimately, as a leftie, you will always attack people like the Pope, as he doesn't fight back, but you will never attack muslims who beat up homo's, as they are favoured by you politically.
If I am wrong and you are a seeker of the truth, wherever it takes you, rather than a political hack, perhaps you could do some research on female political activists being raped by Paestinians. I have read a few stories about this, but I'm not sure if it is true. If it is true and the left has covered it up for political reasons, then you should expose it. If it is a slander, then you should also expose it.
Seeking the truth, regardless of who it damages, determines the journalist from the hack. I think you are a hack, because I was a communist, so I know how the left operates. I dare you to prove me wrong.
For those who remember how Private eye greeted the visit to Britain of Emperor Hirohito in the 60's, there's only one honest response to Pope Adolf's visit.
ReplyDeletehttp://littlerichardjohn.blogspot.com/2010/09/piss-off-pope-nonce.html
Nice intervention at the Orwell gig last night, BTW
http://littlerichardjohn.blogspot.com/2010/10/prevention-of-orwell.html
I can't find where else to post this comment so I'll post it here. I've just heard you on Radio 4 and I agree with just about everything you said about living frugally - except about paying back your student loan. How come? I'm on benefit and I don't have to pay back mine. Until I lost my job I was earning less than £12,000 a year before deductions so I just sent my pay slips to the Student Loan Company when they sent their forms to me. They then deferred my payments for another year. Now I've lost my job and I'm unemployed I took the form down to the Job Centre and got them to stamp it and sent it off to the SLC and they deferred payments again. With housing benefit I am just about managing to pay my rent and my bills. I don't smoke, can't drive, don't have a telly, central heating or double glazing and I buy my clothes in charity shops and Primark. Iceland does some very good microwave meals for one for £1 each and the traders on my local market fruit and veg stall will often sell stuff for a VERY low price if I get there just before they pack up. Although my flat is old, at least it's not damp like the one I had when I was a student and I live alone in this one now instead of sharing with three others in a two bedroom house. Oh yes. I almost forgot to say I'm 60 years old and I didn't go to university till my marriage broke up when I was 40. So young graduates are not the only ones who can't find suitable work after they leave university. I've been deferring my Student Loan payments for almost 20 years now!
ReplyDelete'It's fantastic that there's a protest, i agree with james if we protest for a cause then it means we are united and we will not let any one to discriminate us.
ReplyDelete-Aansy stone
Yes would also be agreeing with as to what all James wrote.... if the people of the country stand as a nation they are able to go and stop any discrimination that happens against the interest sfot te commmnity livign there.....
ReplyDeleteIt will be strength if people get together!!
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I admit that the long break and the rest were both much needed and very much appreciated. I am thankful for that time, and still look back on it with delight through these long, dark, cold days. london apartments for rent
ReplyDelete