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The age of selfishness
Gaurdian UK ^ | October 5 | Martin Jacques

Posted on 10/05/2002 10:33:03 AM PDT by Happygal

I left for Hong Kong in late 1998, returning just over a year ago. It was the first time I had ever spent a chunk of time outside Britain. I recommend it. You will never see your own country in the same light again, especially if you choose to live outside the west. You will realise that "our world" is a small and declining fraction of humanity, a fact that we are largely unaware of in our post-imperial hubris. I had left these shores with a feeling of unease. Far from sharing the widespread euphoria for New Labour, I was deeply troubled by what seemed to me to be its transparent vacuity, its devotion to hyperbole rather than substance. My disquiet about my country, though, was not confined to the Blair "project": it also had something to do with the state of the culture, with the rise of celebrity, the coarsening of tone, a loss of meaning, though I found it difficult to give expression to these thoughts. Upon my return, I found that much of what I had felt about New Labour was now widely shared. It is the nature of the wider cultural trends that I want to deal with here. I will divide these into two: post-imperial culture and popular culture. Returning to Britain, one observation struck me most forcibly. It has become fashionable to believe that empire and imperial pomp are now but a distant memory, that we laid the colonial ghost to rest at some indeterminate point in the last few decades. I beg to differ. Once an imperial nation, always an imperial nation, even when the substance of power has long since disappeared. It is a mentality, a way of being and thinking.

As a nation we still have a desperate need to believe that we still matter. The expressions of this are often quite benign. One example was the ridiculous hype about Cool Britannia: how we were the coolest nation on earth. A good friend of mine who has done some excellent work trying to civilise football fans announced on television that England had the friendliest fans at the World Cup. The friendliest ? Buried deep in the national psyche, in a way that affects each and every one of us, is a desperate desire to believe that we are the best: it is part of our imperial genetic make-up, shared only by other imperial nations like the United States and France. Living in Hong Kong and travelling extensively in East Asia, the world's most dynamic region, where Britain barely registers, the absurdity of this world-view became ever more apparent.

Other symptoms of our post-imperial hangover are not so benign. Margaret Thatcher, still the defining figure of contemporary politics, remained utterly unrepentant about our history and dreamed of restoring it in chastened circumstances. Tony Blair believes that it is still Britain's historic role to be a major arbiter of global affairs. This, of course, is no longer possible except riding pillion to the United States. We thus now have the extraordinary sight of Britain acting as the mouthpiece of the United States in a far more servile manner than was the case even during the cold war. Our prime ministers, especially those who dream of a place in history, seem to find it impossible not to behave in an imperial fashion. Their pretensions, though, surely speak not only of themselves but also of the national psyche.

Of course, Tony Blair has a fondness for hyperbole, and not only of the imperial variety. The Third Way, abolition of left and right, new politics, end of ideology, ethical foreign policy and the abolition of the economic cycle have all been part of his repertoire. Hyperbole rather than substance has been New Labour's stock in trade. It is a movement in search of a cause and meaning. At its heart is a black hole, a numbing vacuity. Far from ushering in a new world of vision and meaning, New Labour has become synonymous with gesture, emptiness, ephemera and pastiche.

In this it perfectly mirrors, and complements, the state of popular culture. When I left these shores, the icon of the new flippant, irreverent, anything-goes, infantile, self-referential, self-absorbed celebrity culture was Chris Evans. Since my return he has been barely visible but no matter, the syndrome he represents has grown like Topsy. There is no longer one Chris Evans but a huge cast of them. Popular culture has become a feeding frenzy, its appetite for something different and more outrageous insatiable. Infatuation with the "new", for New Labour and popular culture alike, has become a substitute for meaning. Perhaps it is the destiny of old imperial nations to end up like this: having lost an irrecoverable project, there remains the slippery slope to irrelevance, self-obsession and cultural bulimia.

Over the last decade or so, there has been a general trend in western societies towards mass populism, "rabble" democracy, and a "consumer is king" cultural mentality. Many programmes on television reflect this, from Big Brother to Jerry Springer, as does the rise of politicians like Silvio Berlusconi who, more than any other political figure, epitomises the new culture.

The roots of much of this lie, not least, in the extent to which the market has become all-pervasive. The ubiquity of market values came as quite a shock to me after nearly three years away: when you live with it all the time, somehow you become unaware of the extent to which it is progressively invading the culture. The market mentality has moved well beyond the original areas of contestation into health, education, old age, culture, relationships, morality, personal behaviour and childhood. The market as the measure of all worth is visibly on the march, seeping into every pore of society.

Market hegemony, however, is not the only reason for the trend towards individualism. It is also a consequence of a seemingly unstoppable movement towards personal freedom. In any trade-off between the social good and personal freedom, the latter has progressively won out. The old rules and boundaries marking personal behaviour have been eroded, sometimes even dissolved. Rules are to be made and remade, there are no absolutes. The old strictures governing sexual behaviour have been transformed. Marriage, not so long ago the institution which defined the sacred union of human beings, governed by a myriad of rights and responsibilities, has become for many a temporary arrangement and, for even more, a commitment to be postponed or even avoided.

It goes without saying that this has transformed us all. It has enormously expanded our personal freedom and opportunity. Much of it has been for the good. It has brought a new sense of openness and tolerance. It is also totally out of control. Every society depends on rules, on constraint, on balance, on enduring values, on a sense of morality that cannot be reduced to the do-it-yourself and the contingent. All have suffered grievous harm in the face of the advancing army of personal freedom. We may live in the age of freedom, but it should more properly be described as the age of selfishness. The result is that the myriad ties that hold society together have been seriously weakened. We live in a world of increasing impermanence, transience and ephemerality, where little or nothing is forever, and individual gratification is the highest priority.

I must admit that I now view the balance between social good and personal freedom differently from before I left England. Broadly speaking, while appreciating the downside, I still felt that the trend was positive. Now I hold a different view. The combination of marketisation and unrestrained individualism are profoundly corrosive and are undermining the social ties that bind us together. Perhaps you think I exaggerate. We work the longest hours of any OECD country: longer hours at work mean less time for family and friends. Our public services are characterised by deprivation and squalor because for decades society has chosen personal consumption above investment in social goods. Public spaces have become increasingly scarred by anti-social behaviour.

There has been a general decline in manners and courtesy, the public demonstration of respect towards other members of society. Street crime has risen dramatically, bespeaking a lack of respect for others; anything goes in the pursuit of one's own avaricious needs. Old people have become increasingly marginalised as the extended family has declined, the wisdom of age less valued and society more youth-orientated. Britain's savings ratio is lower than at any time since 1963 and the lowest in western Europe: people prefer to consume in the present rather than save for the future. Britain, like the continent, has a weak sense of the future, which expresses itself in many ways, from a lack of commitment to children to our inability to organise a half-decent public transport system.

But perhaps the most telling examples lie in the realm of personal relations. There is a powerful trend towards the balkanisation of society into a myriad of peer groups, mainly based around work and profession, and the progressive erosion of permanent and enduring relationships as expressed in the family. Peer group relationships, by their very nature, are more functional, transient, and generationally-specific. The "peer group society" resembles the market in its characteristics: friendships are more short-lived and contractual in nature. By contrast, family relationships are permanent, unconditional, utterly unequal and non-contractual in nature. It is impossible for a person ever to reciprocate the love they receive from their parents (especially the mother): the only reciprocation is through the love they give and sacrifice they make for their own children.

The most dramatic expression of the erosion of social ties and the emphasis on the present and self-gratification is the attitude towards children. The birth rate has been steadily falling and is now below 1.7, far short of the level at which a society naturally replenishes itself. Declining societies are those that cannot reproduce their own populations. The future is sacrificed for the present. Mothers are having children at an ever-later age. More women are choosing not to have children. More mothers are electing to carry on working after they have given birth: and there is no sign that fathers are compensating for this by deciding not to work, or work less. The result is that parenting time has declined significantly, and society en masse now pays others to care for their children. The human cost of this failure to give parenting its due priority lies sometime in the future, in the impoverishment of human relationships, the decline of intimacy, behavioural problems and the like.

These are deeply rooted cultural trends that have been under way for some four decades. It would be fanciful to think that politicians have a great deal of control over them. But it would also be wrong to suggest that society is powerless to influence or mould these trends. Thatcherism was responsible for articulating a new philosophy that has shaped the behaviour and attitude of each and every one of us: the market as a universal logic, the "selfish" individual, the iconic status of business and businessmen, money as the ultimate measure. Without Thatcherism, these trends would not have had the same inflexion or reach. They have continued unabated under New Labour for one simple reason: New Labour subscribes to virtually the same lexicon of beliefs as Thatcherism. Even now, when belatedly it has accepted that the public services desperately require a huge injection of cash, it has utterly failed to make the case for the sanctity and singularity of the public realm.

When I left Britain, I had a sense that somehow New Labour would end in tears. A strong part of me thought that New Labour might even implode, given the shallowness of its support and the contrived and superficial nature of its philosophy. But I completely under- estimated the scale of the crisis of the Tory party. People have nowhere else to go. But upon my return I feel no less uneasy about where my country is headed, indeed my disquiet is even greater. I make no excuses for thinking apocalyptically. Consider the brew: a vapid, vacuous political project, which has surfed the fashions of the time with little substance and few roots; a decline in politics, first widely discussed 10 years ago, but a process which has since gone very much further; and a hollowed-out, atomised popular culture, increasingly devoid of meaning. This is a recipe for dark times ahead.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Miscellaneous; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: newlabour; thatcherism; tonyblair
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To: Happygal; MadIvan
Jimrob will be in here in a minute to tell us to either...'Take a room or a boxing ring' *ROFL*

Well, I for one would not encourage anyone to mess up (or delete) this thread. Where else can we be treated to Gaelic poetry with an English translation?

Ivan and Happygal... enjoy! Life is short and it is not often one meets a soulmate with the same political beliefs. :-)

41 posted on 10/05/2002 3:17:47 PM PDT by LBGA
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To: Hemlock; MadIvan
How the hell can anyone read this blowhard? Maybe I'm too American, but good God, get to the friggin' point.

I'm IRISH...and God HIMSELF knows how we like to yammer on without even having a point to talk about in the first place, but I agree with you entirely. The Gaurdian needs a good Irish journalist I'm thinking. I'm going to apply for their next vacancy.

42 posted on 10/05/2002 3:18:32 PM PDT by Happygal
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To: Happygal
small grin

Also, since the enemy has been doing his level best to tempt you as well. ;)

Love, Ivan

43 posted on 10/05/2002 3:18:43 PM PDT by MadIvan
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To: Happygal
The Gaurdian needs a good Irish journalist I'm thinking. I'm going to apply for their next vacancy.

I fear honesty and integrity are career ending ailments at the Guardian, dear. Though you spell their name as well as they do. ;)

Love, Ivan

44 posted on 10/05/2002 3:20:30 PM PDT by MadIvan
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To: MadIvan
You left OUT a bit!!!! *ROFLMAO*
45 posted on 10/05/2002 3:21:13 PM PDT by Happygal
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To: templar
British Operations 1945-2000
Please note this is NOT a complete list. This list does not include flood, hurricane and earthquake relief and operations in Hong Kong to prevent the flood of refugees from Communist China. Figures in brackets are the British Army casualties (Killed/Wounded)


1945-48 India Decolonisation and Partition
1945-48 Palestine (223/478)
1945-46 Dutch East Indies Restoring Dutch Colonial rule
1946 H.M.S. Volage hit by mines off Albania
1946-48 Greece Supporting Gov. forces during Civil War
1947 Aden Riots
1948 Gold Coast Riots, British Honduras
1948-60 Malaya Emergency (509/921 including 159/308 Gurkhas)
1948-1951 Eritrea (Operations against Shifta Terrorists)
1949 Akaba Threat of Israeli Invasion
1950 Singapore (Hartog riots)
1950-53 Korean War
1951 Akaba (Moussadeq Oil Nationalization)
1951-54 Suez Canal Zone
1952 Monte Bello Island Oct. First British A Bomb test
1952-56 Kenya Operations against the Mau Mau (12/69)
1953 British Guiana
1954-83 Cyprus (99/414)
1955 Singapore Riots, Buraimi Oasis operations
1956 Bahrain riots, Hong Kong riots, Singapore riots
Suez operations Clash on Yemenis Border
1957 British Honduras, Yemeni border clash
1957 Christmas Island May First British H Bomb test
1957-59 Muscat and Oman (6/6)
1958 Nassau strike, Jordan/Lebanon intervention
State of emergency declared in Aden.
Nyasaland (Malawi) Riots
1959 Gan riots
1960 Jamaica
1960-1 Cameroons Peace Keeping operations
1961 Kuwait, Zanzibar
1962 British Honduras, British Guiana, Aden riots Brunei *
1963 Swaziland, Zanzibar Aden
1963-66 Borneo *
1963-64 Cyprus Peace Keeping Operations
1964 Zanzibar revolution, Tuanganyika Army mutiny
Uganda Army mutiny, Kenya Army mutiny
British Guiana, civil unrest
1964-67 Aden and Radfan (90/510)
1965 Mauritius, Bechuanaland
1966 Hong Kong riots, Das Island, Seychelles
1967 Hong Kong riots
1968 Bermuda & Mauriius State of Emergency
1969 Anguilla March to September. So called Upraising
1969-84 Northern Ireland (To 27/1/84, not including UDR. 371/?)
1970 Cayman Islands April Demonstrations against Colonial administration.
1970-76 Dhofar (24/55)
1972 Bomb Scare on Queen Elizabeth II in mid atlantic and consequent SAS drop
1973 Bermuda No details
1974- Cyprus Peace Keeping Operations
1979-84 Operation Agila Rhodesia/Zimbabwe
1980 SAS assault on Iranian Embassy, New Hebrides
1982 Falklands War
1982 Sinai Peace Keeping operations
1983 Beirut
1991 Persian Gulf War
1991 Kurdistan Humanitarian Relief
1992 onwards Bosnia
1999 Kosovo
2000 East Timor
2000 Sierra Leone

* Independent figures

They gave up. They surrendered. They Lost


Politicans definitely, Church of England maybe, Tommy Atkins....never.

WHEN the 'arf-made recruity goes out to the East
'E acts like a babe an' 'e drinks like a beast,
An' 'e wonders because 'e is frequent deceased
Ere 'e's fit for to serve as a soldier.
Serve, serve, serve as a soldier,
Serve, serve, serve as a soldier,
Serve, serve, serve as a soldier,
So-oldier of the Queen!

Now all you recruities what's drafted to-day,
You shut up your rag-box an' 'ark to my lay,
An' I'll sing you a soldier as far as I may:
A soldier what's fit for a soldier.
Fit, fit, fit for a soldier . . .

First mind you steer clear o' the grog-sellers' huts,
For they sell you Fixed Bay'nets that rots out your guts -
Ay, drink that 'ud eat the live steel from your butts -
An' it's bad for the young British soldier.
Bad, bad, bad for the soldier . . .

When the cholera comes - as it will past a doubt -
Keep out of the wet and don't go on the shout,
For the sickness gets in as the liquor dies out,
An' it crumples the young British soldier.
Crum-, crum-, crumples the soldier . . .

But the worst o' your foes is the sun over'ead:
You must wear your 'elmet for all that is said:
If 'e finds you uncovered 'e'll knock you down dead,
An' you'll die like a fool of a soldier.
Fool, fool, fool of a soldier . . .

If you're cast for fatigue by a sergeant unkind,
Don't grouse like a woman nor crack on nor blind;
Be handy and civil, and then you will find
That it's beer for the young British soldier.
Beer, beer, beer for the soldier . . .

Now, if you must marry, take care she is old -
A troop-sergeant's widow's the nicest I'm told,
For beauty won't help if your rations is cold,
Nor love ain't enough for a soldier.
'Nough, 'nough, 'nough for a soldier . . .

If the wife should go wrong with a comrade, be loath
To shoot when you catch 'em - you'll swing, on my oath! -
Make 'im take 'er and keep 'er: that's Hell for them both,
An' you're shut o' the curse of a soldier.
Curse, curse, curse of a soldier . . .

When first under fire an' you're wishful to duck,
Don't look nor take 'eed at the man that is struck,
Be thankful you're livin', and trust to your luck
And march to your front like a soldier.
Front, front, front like a soldier . . .

When 'arf of your bullets fly wide in the ditch,
Don't call your Martini a cross-eyed old bitch;
She's human as you are - you treat her as sich,
An' she'll fight for the young British soldier.
Fight, fight, fight for the soldier . . .

When shakin' their bustles like ladies so fine,
The guns o' the enemy wheel into line,
Shoot low at the limbers an' don't mind the shine,
For noise never startles the soldier.
Start-, start-, startles the soldier . . .

If your officer's dead and the sergeants look white,
Remember it's ruin to run from a fight:
So take open order, lie down, and sit tight,
And wait for supports like a soldier.
Wait, wait, wait like a soldier . . .

When you're wounded and left on Afghanistan's plains,
And the women come out to cut up what remains,
Jest roll to your rifle and blow out your brains
An' go to your Gawd like a soldier.
Go, go, go like a soldier,
Go, go, go like a soldier,
Go, go, go like a soldier,
So-oldier of the Queen!
46 posted on 10/05/2002 3:24:25 PM PDT by ijcr
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To: LBGA; MadIvan
Thank you. But WHO said we have the same political beliefs? *L* Ehh..well, ok..we are both conservatives. We just don't talk Northern Ireland....at least not at a 100 mile radius! *ROFL*
47 posted on 10/05/2002 3:24:25 PM PDT by Happygal
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To: MadIvan
Mad Ivan, are you tipsy? (And are you sure it's the wine?) ;-)
48 posted on 10/05/2002 3:31:20 PM PDT by schmelvin
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To: schmelvin; MadIvan
Dare I answer for him? *L*
Ehhh..yup?
And it IS the wine. (He only gets whine from me! *LOL*)
49 posted on 10/05/2002 3:33:37 PM PDT by Happygal
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To: Happygal
We just don't talk Northern Ireland....at least not at a 100 mile radius! *ROFL*

LOL... that would be like a yankee telling a southern gal like me that Sherman should have won a peace prize for ending the War Between the States. Some things are better left unsaid, but there is a whole lot more that can be agreed upon. :-)

50 posted on 10/05/2002 3:34:09 PM PDT by LBGA
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To: MadIvan
I fear honesty and integrity are career ending ailments at the Guardian, dear. Though you spell their name as well as they do. ;)

Ahh sue me, I don't spell good. THAT'S what sub-editors are for. I am shootin' from the hip, and I couldn't be proverbially arsed using a spell check tonight (in fact, I never use one...which is probably why I am not writing for the Economist! *L* They sound like types who meticulously use a spell check! *LOL*)

51 posted on 10/05/2002 3:36:07 PM PDT by Happygal
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To: Happygal
You left OUT a bit!!!! *ROFLMAO*

Oh did I? ;)

Love, Ivan

52 posted on 10/05/2002 3:39:24 PM PDT by MadIvan
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To: LBGA; MadIvan
Ye know what's really funny? The one time me and Ivan did talk about Northern Ireland it got to a stage when he said to me 'Have it, we don't want it' And I said..'Like we want it now, you can keep it with all it's problems' *LOL*

I should really apply for a job in the Northern assembly. I'd whup those Unionists into shape in no time, and the Shinners would be needing colon examinations to find their semtex! *L*

53 posted on 10/05/2002 3:39:34 PM PDT by Happygal
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To: Hemlock; Happygal
How the hell can anyone read this blowhard? Maybe I'm too American, but good God, get to the friggin' point.

I don't think there is an actual point; it's like a written account of a bad acid trip.

And that's being kind.

54 posted on 10/05/2002 3:39:38 PM PDT by Madame Dufarge
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To: Happygal
We just don't talk Northern Ireland....at least not at a 100 mile radius!

Now darling, you know we reached a compromise. Neither of us really want it. ;)

Love, Ivan

55 posted on 10/05/2002 3:40:45 PM PDT by MadIvan
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To: Madame Dufarge; MadIvan
I don't think there is an actual point; it's like a written account of a bad acid trip.

Well, I've never had an acid trip. But there have been occasions (ie..St. Patrick's Day) when I've talked myself into and out of an argument with myself. This could be one of Jacques such trips. :-)

56 posted on 10/05/2002 3:42:04 PM PDT by Happygal
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To: schmelvin
Mad Ivan, are you tipsy? (And are you sure it's the wine?) ;-)

I assure you I am rarely drunk on wine. But I am always drunk on Happygal's beauty and charm. ;)

Regards, Ivan

57 posted on 10/05/2002 3:42:23 PM PDT by MadIvan
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To: MadIvan
See post Number 53! *LOL*
58 posted on 10/05/2002 3:43:23 PM PDT by Happygal
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To: LBGA
LOL... that would be like a yankee telling a southern gal like me that Sherman should have won a peace prize for ending the War Between the States.

LBGA, please, get it right; it was the War of Northern Aggression. :-)

(Those d@mned Yankees won't be so lucky next time.) ;-)

59 posted on 10/05/2002 3:43:31 PM PDT by schmelvin
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To: MadIvan; schmelvin
I assure you I am rarely drunk on wine. But I am always drunk on Happygal's beauty and charm. ;)

MY GOD man you are rat arsed! *L* You are letting down the side. *ROFL*

60 posted on 10/05/2002 3:45:15 PM PDT by Happygal
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