On Friday
there were some predictable reactions to the election results. One bone headed ignoramus sprayed on the memorial to the women of World War 2. I remember those women and what many of them
suffered. The memorial in fact
recognises this among the ordinary women at the time.
Many luvvies
have been shocked and some have shown their stripes. Jessica Duchen in her blog called David
Cameron a swine by implication. Given
the number of high Tories I have seen at Covent Garden her comment suggests pots
and kettles.
In the
playground the fray is just beginning. According
to Wikipedia there are 38 Labour members of the current Scottish Parliament
with an election to come in May 2016.
The campaign began this weekend with the UK election out of the way. That is if the media blitz from the SNP is
any guide.
Also, at the
moment there are around the same number of lost Labour souls, losers of once
safe seats, looking at five years to go before the next UK election, if they
were even selected as candidates, let alone elected. For those who enjoy political blood sports it
could be a feast.
Among the
factors bearing on this is the chance that there will be no BBC to complain
about or make use of in that the writing is on the wall for it in its present form. What will be left is a guess, but let us hope
for the survival of the cartoon channels and Radio 3.
Even there the
BBC Proms might make a tasty package for some media people to take
advantage of its world following. It
could be tempting, yet again this year the BBC has botched the TV coverage in
its programming.
The problem of
perception at the moment that is all pervasive and unrecognised is that there
is extensive and rapid change going on in parallel in many sectors across the
world. As we have signed up to
globalisation full scale we cannot be immune and equally we cannot control
whatever political devices we employ.
Our
government, so called, is largely a branch office for entities that are
regional, such as the EU, or global in some form or other. The EU itself is only an intermediary
regional office in many respects. Where
the head offices are and who they answer to, if anybody, could be anywhere in
the world.
As all are
wired up and communications instant they have become more powerful and
effective in issuing rules, regulations, directives and the rest. The trouble is that in much of the world the
branch and regional offices are corrupt, grossly inefficient and bad on detail
and so are some head offices.
So in the
Atlantic Isles and the various bits and pieces of so-called government the
struggle and effort is comparable with groups of ants with different ant heaps
fighting over which lump of matter to push into their particular heap.
But there are
a lot of anteaters about with long noses who see the ants as their nutrients
and basic diet, notably interests that are more global than the governments,
better equipped and more powerful.
Especially, if
they control the media and the political choices made among those who want
admission into any governing entity.
I wouldn't be sorry to see the demise of the BBC. Most of its output is trash. Too timid, too close to the establishment and too fond of third-rate celebrities.
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