Sunday, 14 April 2013

The Thatcher Divide



                                                            The Thatcher Divide
On the eighth of April 2013 Margaret Thatcher died. Barely had the news flown off the stands  than a whole controversy was created. Questions focussed on the legacy she would leave and how history would view her time in power.

The legacy she made in Britain is actually hard to assess. In some ways she is credited with reinventing the greatness of Britain and making Britain again an influential power. This however is open to interpretation.

At work today I asked the question as to what my colleagues thought.
“It was so long ago” said one “I cannot really have an opinion. “
Certainly in the end there was less national mourning however there is quite a legacy of polarization which reflects to some extent Britain’s own political divides.  To the right she was a cherished icon, a lady who made the country great again. The myth of the “Iron Lady” who took on the unions gained some credence. The prime minister who fought the Falklands war and won three elections is somebody to celebrate.

To the left she is symbol of everything that is wrong in Britain today. Her legacy was divisive and served merely to entrench the privileges of the rich while her policies of deregulation contributed directly to the banking crisis. She is considered socially divisive to the extent that street parties were organized to celebrate her demise. Stories about a party to celebrate her death were common knowledge in alternative circles years ago. To many people she was a hated figure!

How she will be remembered is very much dependent on the standpoint of the viewer and among huge sections of the British population the memories are not so fond. There are memories of the destruction of the manufacturing base of the country. This of course is a decision that is coming back to haunt us and her government along with almost all the succeeding governments put their faith in the service industries to bring future prosperity. The banking crash has of course now put paid to that.

One of the features often remarked on is the youth of a lot of the protesters who came out to hold street parties to celebrate her death. Many of those interviewed by the press could not have been more than about two years old at the time she left office. However, soon delegations of miners whose towns were destroyed by her policies are likely to be joining in these protests. However there is a feeling that her rule took place over twenty years ago. To a lot of the generation who were around at that time there is little wish to celebrate, only to forget her.  While they do not like her legacy they could just not really be bothered to hold street parties as they have enough trouble sorting out their own lives.

In terms of living under her rule I can remember it well. She certainly had a talent for manipulating the tides of public opinion and I would certainly say it was true that half the country loved her and half hated her. I can still remember the day when the news came out. It was a strange feeling to see people almost strolling around like headless chickens. In some ways the appeal was that of a strong woman to save us! The feelings aroused were different in that some were very enthusiastic about her demise. Others complained she had had a bad time because she was a woman.

On the television screens her presence seemed often distant. Many people described her as prissy and not a person who cared about the people she represented. That was a view shared by quite a few of her party supporters as well. As with all politicians, when at first breakneck growth built on credit came she was lionized. When the recession started she was demonized. The moment it became obvious that her policies were not working the calls for her to resign became more and more strident. Until they reached the final point and she was deposed by her own party

Friday, 22 February 2013

Old London syndrome



                                                Old London Syndrome

London has become in the past few years increasingly a multicultural city. Most parts of the city are home to many people of various cultures having absorbed several waves of immigration, the most recent being the waves of Eastern European immigrants mainly Polish people who came with the old European Union expansion.

Thos however has not been achieve without some cost as has been borne out by the rapidly changing fortunes of various parts of London.

A good case of this is Bermondsey where up till about twenty five years ago it was very difficult to survive if you came from anywhere outside. The local people were very clannish and distinctly did not welcome outsides to their domain.

Their resistance to incomers was legendary and there was often a problem even for people from England who were not born behind a biscuit factory in Bermondsey. In the mid eighties I remember visiting a pub in that area with an Irish friend  who complained about the distinctly unwelcoming atmosphere in there. At the time a spokesman for the local authority has visited a tenants meeting and complained about the overtly racist tone of many of the residents complaints. This was the land of the traditional pie and mash shop, The so called Cockney culture (They were not born within the sound of Bow Bells) and an absolute resistance to anything or anybody who has come from outside.

To its credit the local authority persisted in its policy of allocating housing to other people not of this group ad would not be dissuaded. Hat these people had to however endure was something else. Stories of threats and excrement pushed through letter boxes were legion. Everything was seen as a cultural attack by the majority there. Anybody from outside was distinctly unwelcome particularly people of a different colour.

In some ways this was a last stand because today the area is as multicultural as any other in London. In fact places that were racist haunts at that time have completely changed and now welcome everyone. In one of the great seismic shifts that has happened in London integration became the norm.

As the old working class culture was pushed aside and more people moved in helped by the government at that time trying to develop the docks and attracting private money a wave of gentrification happened. While it did not spread everywhere the culture changed somewhat and the older people became somewhat dispersed, many joining the flight to the suburbs and commuter towns beyond. Bermondsey became a multicultural area just like all the rest.

Today intolerance is restricted to a few old people who mutter about being in a minority to anybody who will listen. Chinese and Indian restaurants are legion and the area is no longer the white Londoner preserve that it was. People from all over the world and all over the country come to live in Bermondsey. The old racist and xenophobic intolerance is just a memory!


Friday, 4 January 2013

fast food at night



                                                            Fast food at night

London in the early morning is a rather different place. So many bars and clubs more or less make a mockery of the old licensing laws that used to decree that pubs shut on certain hours. When the laws were liberalized there were many dire warnings of what would happen but in general the level of drunkenness did not rose particularly, that is not more than it had already.

London in the small hours particularly on Friday ad Saturday nights is the domain of the drunk. So many people get together to drink in bars and go on to their clubs usually with music provided. The night is long and mostly there is a favourite food, the Doner kebab

This food is made of meat specially placed on a grill from which slices are cut. With the addition of salad it is placed n a special thin pitta bread, Sauces are added the usual repertoire being chilli sauce or garlic sauce.
This has become one of the foods of choice after a heavy night’s drinking. Britain tends to have the custom of an evening spent downing pints of beer and then going for a kebab to absorb some of the alcohol. The Spanish custom for instance, of eating along with the drink is not much in evidence in the pub culture here.

However doner kebab is something the British public have taken to their hearts. The places in London are usually run buy immigrants from Turkey who stay open all hours of the night. Their work is admirable as they work long and hard and have to put up with a lot of abuse from drunken customers who seem to think they can vent all their frustrations on them
Most other people in this society would give up on this enterprise but this does not faze the shop owners who carry on with the job regardless.

So much is actually made in this trade and in a way they suffer less from the clientele that the chicken and chips shops also ubiquitous who mostly have to shut much earlier.  Fish and chips shops of the traditional kind tend to close much earlier. The shops that have chicken and chips usually sell cheaper products so instead they usually have troublesome adolescents who are more likely to have got their highs from illegal drugs such as cannabis and then plan quite nasty violence instead!

The drunkenness in London and other towns has usually raised a lot of concerns about the alcohol fuelled crime that occurs in city centres at night. Various solutions have been proposed such as a minimum price for drinks. However at the real centre of the problem is the fact that most people in these situations feel they have no other outlets for their frustrations apart from getting roaring drunk. Until this is addressed London and other cities will continue to experience this sort of drunken and drug fuelled behavior!

Thursday, 13 December 2012

Christmas Advent



                                                            Christmas Advent

At the beginning of December London is preparing for Christmas. At the moment the talk is of seasonal cheer. Everybody is exhorted to show some kindness though quite why this is only necessary at Christmas is a moot point. The run up to this shows the placing of Christmas lights which are placed in many of the streets. Many homes as well will compete to offer these lights in more and more extravagant forms. In most workplaces a large Christmas party is planned. This can be the only get together in the workplace for a whole year and the spirit of this is togetherness and good cheer. The shops will be encouraging all to shop till they drop and many shops will become impassable with crowds filing all the supermarkets. Many people are buying Christmas presents for their children in August and it is still fairly common for people to save up for a whole year for the event although in many cases it is the credit card that is taking the slack

 This does not always resonate with a country which is rapidly ceasing to be in any but a nominal sense a Christian country. In many ways it is more reminiscent of a folk festival with most of the religious undertones being long forgotten. Most people are hardly aware of the significance seeing it as an excuse to have a knees up. All will be forgotten anyway in the preparations.

The festival is billed as a commercial feast and all the economic statisticians are poring over the data already to see of there is any sign of recovery in spending. There will be a lot of analysis of the takings in shops and whether or not there will be signs of recovery. One consequence of Christmas is that subsequently there will be many sales of discounted goods in January to get rid of the additional stock of Christmas. The figures from these will also be exhaustively analyzed.

The day itself is seen as a festival only for family. Most of the population will be maxing out their credit cards in preparation for the feast. In some places there will be a competition to staff different birds inside each other to see who can offer the most sumptuous Christmas dinner. The feast of calories and cholesterol continues with most families opting for turkey though a sizeable number will buy goose instead. All the trimmings will add a fair amount to the bill of course. Festive foods such as Christmas pudding and mince pies will be in evidence all around. 

All will be exhorted to be nice to each other over Christmas. We will all be told to set these issues aside. In the country it is generally considered to be a scandal if anybody spends Christmas on their own. Hard pressed families will come together to join in the enforced Christmas gaiety. However another consequence will be that the pressures of the preparations will lead to family fights and ruptures which can continue into the New Year and beyond.

On the day itself very few work places will be open. All shops and public transport will be shut and the few taxi drivers that operate will be paid handsomely for it as they operate on vastly increased fares or this period.  A few pubs will be open at reduced hours as people escape the various tensions produced by the enforced togetherness. In this way the society is one where all are virtually forced to celebrate.

 After the day litter bins will be overflowing with all the paraphernalia of seasonal indulgence, the wrapping paper, the old Christmas crackers and the remains of overindulgence in both food and alcohol.

Inevitably the mood will carry on to the hopes of the New Year and then suddenly cease. By January everyone is broke and contemplating the debts that have been produced by the gaiety. In its place an air of depression will stalk the land as all are thinking of what has been spent.  Seasonal cheer will have gone, Winter will be still with us and most of u will have little to spare in the bank!

Thursday, 29 November 2012

A day in South London



                                                            A day in South London

Today of all days was to be an action packed day. I had to get off to work early and before that to vote in the local authority by election. This by-election had cause quite a lot of local acrimony with the Liberal Democrats out in droves. I had been canvassed four times by them myself. In this mood I set off to vote early in this by-election on my way to work.

This hope of voting early and quickly was soon to be dashed as I entered the polling station  only to be told I was at the wrong polling station and that I had to go up the road. I protested as this station had been clearly indicated on the card. The polling official was insistent so I headed off to the other poling station which was about five minutes walk away. Another lady had been told the same and was also complaining about having to get to work

I arrived at the other polling station only to be told that I had to go back to the original polling station. One of the officials was speaking on his mobile  and he said ”I have a gentleman here who is quite irate” Well of course this time I was irate after having been sent on a mini tour of the ward's polling stations. I asked who I could complain to and was given the name of the head of electoral registration to complain to and was told that my original polling station had been given instructions. I was asked where I lived and it appeared the whole block had been the subject of confusion.

This time the polling official apologized profusely and issued me with a ballot paper. Of course this time I was able to vote. Such was that even with the local authority organizing the polling it was  not simple matter. I could not have made this up! I was able to board my bus to work.

After work I just popped in to the supermarket to get a bottle of wine to take to my friend who I was going to see later. This however was nota simple matter as a ferocious argument broke out in the supermarket. On one of the aisles I saw  a lady abusing one of the supermarket staff. In general of course my instinct was to move to the checkout.

Later I saw an employee move to the checkouts saying to the staff  ”You see that lady with the kettles you are not to serve her!”

She then told the woman she would not be served
“That lady has assaulted me
“Why should I do a thing like that?”
“You barged into me with the kettles?”
The employee then said “I am the franchisee and I can say who we serve or not! And we are not serving you!”
The lady then stormed into an ante room and the door then opened to show her talking to the security guard. She was then ejected promptly from the store.
One of them said about the employee
“She has got a temper”
Everybody stood at the checkouts open mouthed at this fight that had been going on>

Well never a dull moment in South London!