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Last 3 Posts @ October 6, 2008 5:17:44 PM EDT

Liverpool Young Writers 08/09 – Now recruiting! (18 mins ago)

Information from an email from Writing on the Wall An innovative local project for Merseyside's budding young writers, poets, M.C.s and performers begins this month....

Louise Baldock

What the f*ck (28 mins ago)

Now it is true that I have been known to overdo the use of 'foul language' but in the circumstances it seems only possible to paraphrase Richard Mottram We're all f*ck...

arbitrary constant

Can Baroness Ashton even become a European Commissioner? (56 mins ago)

Has Brown made a monumental error in putting forward Baroness Ashton to replace Peter Mandelson as the UK’s European Commissioner? That’s the interesting ...

Jon Worth Euroblog

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Compass on Boris - 3 comments

I can't think of any positive reasons why anyone would vote for Boris Johnson for London Mayor. What concerns me, though, is the distinct possibility that Compass - who have launched a 'dossier' (PDF) about the Johnson threat - will find one by mistake.

Compass, and everyone else in the Labour Party, ought to be offering positive reasons why Ken Livingstone should be re-elected, as well as impressing on Ken the need to avoid needlessly alienating many of his party's supporters by (for one thing) chumming-up with foreign dictators - part of the reason why he isn't a shoo-in (a mere 7-4 on) right now. We really must avoid insulting the electorate's intelligence by claiming, as Doreen Lawrence (why?) has, that Johnson they mustn't even think of standing voting for Johnson because cities have a 'unity' (perhaps in the same way that cities can be offended, as Liverpool's spokesmen once claimed it to be) that would be damaged by the election of someone with divergent views. Sorry, but can such sentimental tripe possibly convince anyone over the legal voting age? Adults conduct politics based upon policy (OK, fine, but they should), not identity, and we need to prepare for the day when the Conservatives decide to stand a proper politician as candidate for Mayor. Or PM, for that matter.

Via Tom. Tyger is somewhat in agreement.

Update: fixed an error; added a link.

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Wednesday, February 28, 2007

2020 Vision - 2 comments

I once published a bleating post that, rather than stating explicitly what my concern was, ended up sheepishly calling for "a debate" on said issue, thus avoiding having to express my own view, dodging criticism from one side or the other, and consequently failing to frame or inform the debate in any way.

Just like this, in other words. OK, that's harsh - some people do nothing else, and who can honestly say they haven't pulled this trick once in a while? If anyone had indeed taken up my call on those terms, they'd have found it a pretty unfulfilling experience. For one thing, how can anything be resolved if every view is valuable, as good as any other, there are no wrong answers, and no prospect of the hypothesis (supposedly) under discussion being applied in the real world?

This only worries people who aren't interested in answers, or in truth.

Anyway, back to 2020 Vision, launched today, and backed by Charles Clarke, Alan Milburn, and several Labour MPs and Lords. I'd certainly class it as well-meaning (but helpful?), and there are some good sections in the various launch statements, but here are some of my issues with it:

It's yet another web-site, professionally executed, upon which a fair amount of money will have been spent, but developed in secret, and launched upon the world without any clear idea of its place, its role, its competitors, and so on.

We have blogs (in the UK) by the million, we have sites produced by professional think-tankers, plus endless talks and pamphlets. Can we really expect another site seeking "progressive answers" to find a niche, rather than distracting energy and attention from others? Like Progress, for example, or Compass (aka the Programme for a New Swedish Century - only kidding, guys).

Haven't we reached the limits of the comments-box model of democracy?

You only need to see a small selection of the comments at 2020 - or indeed any high-profile political discussion site - to realise that:
  • The motives of commenters are probably evenly distributed from helpful and positive at one extreme, to downright mischievous at the other, with a good range of pedants and grandstanders throughout. Some sifting has to be done.
  • People are wrong, illogical, incoherent, and inconsistent about so much. Comment boxes aren't good environments for arguing to a conclusion, minds are closed, and it's embarrassing to have it shown that you're wrong.
Ultimately commenters bear no responsibility for the policies they advocate, and those they shoot down. Talk is cheap and easy, and without solving this problem, these web-sites and the noisy debates they produce seem to me to be a complete dead-end for democracy. I don't think it matters whether a million people leave comments, and Tony Blair is at the other end, scribbling ideas down on a pad as they seep through - without involving people directly in the making and application of policies that affect them, in a decentralised way, the problem of alienation between politician/provider and citizen will remain, and people will continue to be moderately disgruntled about their lives and expectations. This sort of politics has to die.

Perhaps economics has the answers we're looking for?

Update (March 1st). A large collection of articles on the same theme.

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Thursday, January 04, 2007

Neal Lawson's illiberalism - 2 comments

Says the Don (who also links to several other critiques), Compass Chair, Neal Lawson, is "a man with a track record of inept and counter-productive support of a range of good causes". The latest mission: using your own ignorance of economics and philosophy, and reluctance to engage with other's arguments, erect a straw man, and call him The Political System. Then, contrarian, demolish with whatever argument you fancy: here, the lukewarm platitudes of priests.
Where do we get moral leadership from today? As we pick up the pieces of another swiped out festive season it's a fitting question. Is there something more to life than the endless cycle of overconsumption? How can the Iraq war or exorbitant city bonuses be justified? Increasingly it is our religious rather than political leaders who attempt to answer these difficult and pressing questions.
The mainstream media in this country undoubtedly trivialises politics in the UK, but the world is full of moral guidance (leadership, if you must): throughout our lives we watch, listen to, and read about the activities of people ranging from family members, to schoolteachers, businesspeople, politicians, and people with many different points of view and ideology, and we respond to what we take to be the positive and negative consequences of those actions, adapting towards what we hope to be 'the good life'. It's central to Lawson's argument that humanity is incapable of any such growth; without the moral leadership - and Lawson clearly has specific moral leadership in mind - the result is disaster. After all, what else could "overconsumption" mean? It's impossible to prove either way, it can be defined any way Neal likes, it sounds bad, and it plays on our guilt, so it's an essential part of the vocabulary for any budding puritan.

I had intended to post just before Christmas in defence of consumerism. It seems to be used overwhelmingly in a puritanical, as well as a snobbish manner, implying that self-appointed arbiters are a better judge of what people spend their money on than they themselves, that the general population is too unsophisticated to see through advertisers' messages, that most shoppers - unlike the happy aesthete - shop out of habit, and for the sheer love of money, and possessions. Consumerism* also implies the population, free to walk the streets, and the puritan fears this kind of mass movement. What is this moral guidance that the religious authorities have to offer? An anti-democratic contempt for the above, but without anything so controversial as an appeal to charity, humility, or generosity? Nothing but platitudes appear in Lawson's piece, just the unfalsifiable "Something (what?) is wrong; something must be done!" that we expect from a Cameron or a Princess Di.

To sacrifice the concept of individual freedom, as Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor appears to advocate - something that the powerless have struggled to seize from the powerful (religious leaders very much included) throughout human history - in favour of some hot air about "the fundamental questions on the sense and direction of our lives", seems designed to return humanity to the stupefaction of centuries past. If Lawson were to realise that it is attempts by religious authorities to increase their presence in schools, to advocate and enforce dress codes (those affected naturally only become "some of society's most vulnerable people" for Neal when the rules are challenged, and the religion takes offence on the individuals' behalf), to defend blasphemy laws, to suppress freedom of speech, to meekly tolerate violence against their own communities, or to tolerate and even advocate the preaching of violence against others - rather than the peaceful faith of individuals - that is a matter of legitimate public concern over the influence of religious representatives, he might be less inclined to impugn atheists, secularists, rationalists, and politicians, not to mention workers at Goldman Sachs.
Our politicians have forgotten that power and principle are two sides of the same coin. Politics has stopped being a different vision of the good society and is instead a job for technocrats and for self-proclaimed rationalists.
To suggest that those involved in politics aren't interested in visions of a good society is a pretty ignorant comment for someone loosely involved with the blogosphere, and who must encounter individual politicians and political bloggers frequently. Neal might have a point if he has "managerialism" in his sights, but substituting the idea that unelected religious teachers should "lead and motivate the nation", in place of elected politicians doing so, hardly seems an attractive one, even if you believe that people have to be led. The fact that individuals, companies, or collectives, could be empowered to tackle society's problems in a more decentralised way seems hardly to have been considered. Now who's out of touch?

Not content with using the current state of Iraq to say "we were right" to the disparate group known as "opponents of the war", whatever the arguments - some 'realistic', some repulsive - those individuals employed, what Lawson implies is a kind of victor's justice, under which those who fall into the "supporters of the war" camp are to be judged moral criminals, morally vacuous, timorous, or 'careerist', irrespective of the arguments they used, and the principles they sought to promote and defend. Whatever kind of politics could produce this, it's not liberal. Only a tyrant - or a mob - could celebrate the chaos in Iraq - or indeed any argument they believe themselves to have won - with a victimisation of their opponents, as if the moral case was done and dusted, and the continuing debate pushed to one side. Norm's piece on this is a breath of fresh mountain air in comparison.

I don't deny that there will be religious figures (and to reiterate, I'm not talking about individuals with religious faith) who, on the basis of their brains, imagination, humanity, and so on, have acquired a moral authority of their own - or who bring evidence to discussions - and have earned the right to be listened to by thoughtful people. As far as I'm concerned, anyone who believes they enjoy the same right on the basis of their status within their particular sect, or on the basis of a personal recommendation by Neal Lawson (for whom "overly rationalist" is a censure, rather than a precondition for an intelligent debate), can get to the back of a very long queue.

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* My dictionary gives an additional definition of "consumerism", namely "the protection or promotion of the interests of consumers". Is this also frowned upon?

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