In the next
six weeks the electorate of the UK will be circling the Bermuda Triangle that
is British politics while their present leaders and other potential ones
attempt to navigate despite all their compasses and other equipment going wild
or dead.
The three
sides to the triangle are climate change and energy implications, soil
degradation and land use and then matters arising from demographics, population
and migrations. The whirlpool in the
middle is economic turbulence.
Deep beneath
the waters are the great trenches of property, inhabited by voracious beasts
and the other connected one of debt, with much the same beasts and other
creatures unknown or thought to be long extinct, like our aristocracy.
Further into
the deep are many caves, tunnels, holes and the rest that are the places where
all our political myths and fantasies let alone dogmas have their slimy
origins. It is a world of taxation,
benefits, subsidies and channels for funds going who knows where.
Down at the
very bottom lost forever is the wreckage of so many ships of state and airy
policies, manifestos, promises, commitments and theories that disappeared
without trace often in a puff of mist or a glitch in the magnetic field of
events.
We shall never
know really what happened and why only what ancient legends, folk tales and fairy
tales might claim together with the scraps of rhetoric that learned people who
know little allege is political philosophy.
The result
will not be what most people would want it to be. The government that is the consequence is
unlikely to be either competent or able properly to function and the agencies
of state will be largely obeying the instructions and directives of foreign
entities.
To add to this
is the problem of what is truth and what it means. On the LSE site in an article referring to the
Hillsborough Disaster Nick Turnbull
and Dave Richards say:
Quote:
It might be that in some cases, the
long-run lie has paid off for public officials and their institutions.
The time lag provides its own inertia,
because it seems too late to redress the failings. But more importantly, we
must ask the question can the deep culture of secrecy within the British state
ever change?
Secrecy is a tradition that is relied upon
by decision makers of all stripes, to give them a measure of autonomy and
distance from potential criticism, regardless of the quality of their
decisions.
In such a culture, any given individual who
wishes to lie can likely count on his or her colleagues to actively participate
in the deception, not just for self-interest but because it is a way of
governing, a grounding idea embedded in our institutions.
Unquote.
If what little we know or are told is
untrue or only adjacent to the truth and at the same time there is a lot we do
not know and are not going to be told, some of which may emerge in a distant
future or it may not then we are all playing guessing games.
So we do not have three guesses or any at all in reality. The answers may never really emerge but if
they do only in the long run.
What did John Maynard Keynes say in
"Tract on Monetary Reform" in 1923?
"The
long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all
dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too useless a task if in tempestuous
seasons they can only tell us that when the storm is past the ocean is flat
again."
But
not perhaps in the Bermuda Triangle.
It's a shambles which only holds together because we are creatures of habit.
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