Over-50s Are Being Driven Out of Work by Wokery

Allison Pearson in the Telegraph thinks she’s put her finger on what’s really driving the U.K. labour crisis and putting older people off working: the unrelenting, soul-destroying wokery that now permeates every workplace and makes anyone to the Right of Chairman Mao feel like they don’t belong. Here’s an excerpt:

It’s true that lockdown showed a lot of busy people that time at home with family could be more rewarding than the gerbil-wheel of a daily commute. But something else is going on here, I think: increasingly, the modern office feels like hostile territory to baby boomers. Relentless wokery is driving the more mature into retirement before it drives us round the bend.  

Gareth, a Planet Normal listener, wrote to tell me he retired last year from his job as a lawyer to a major public inquiry after three-and-a-half years engaged by the Cabinet Office. “The CO strives hard to promote a ‘woker than thou’ attitude (about the only department in which it does strive hard!) and since the pandemic this went into overdrive,” says Gareth. “It encompassed the entire woke canon from compulsory ‘unconscious bias’ training through finger-wagging lectures on ‘micro-aggressions’, ‘white fragility/privilege’, critical race theory, BLM and structural racism, aka all the shibboleths of the progressive Left, but under a supposedly Conservative Government.”

According to Gareth, the Cabinet Office “is symptomatic of the whole civil-service culture which treats the elected Government with disdain and pursues its own ultra-woke agenda which is entirely contrary to official policy”.

Like many members of staff his age, he was appalled by the “all-pervasive propaganda”. He couldn’t stand a climate in which often entirely innocuous comments were treated as “micro-aggressions” and any deviation from the official view (formerly known as “a difference of opinion”) was treated as heretical.

The civil service, the NHS, higher education and far too many private companies have become a paradise for “recreational offence-takers” who love to air their concocted grievances. On one occasion, Gareth had a complaint lodged against him for using the term Anglo-Saxon. “Apparently, it has negative connotations for the woke. Who knew?”

I reckon there are an awful lot of Gareths out there. Talented, hard-working men and women in their 50s, 60s and 70s who, earlier in their careers, were not exposed to this relentless and rather scary politicisation of the workplace and don’t want to tiptoe about in what Jon calls “this divisive and pernicious Maoist culture”.

Why would any 56-year-old wish to return to work when chances are they will be judged for the crime of not being in possession of the correct pronoun (or even comprehending what that means)? Only recently, a reader told me that a position in the NHS trust where he worked remained unfilled because no one sufficiently “diverse” had applied. It was an important job, one which really needed doing, but far better to leave it vacant than appoint some old white bloke with the right experience, eh?

Allison says that if the Government is serious about persuading over-50s to stay in their jobs, a good start would be to punish employers who discriminate against them.

But that would involve overhauling (or scrapping) the Equality Act, with its ‘protected characteristics’, public sector equality duty and licence for ‘positive’ discrimination, which is the legal fountainhead of all wokery in the U.K. But that’s not something the Tories have shown any interest in in all their 12 years in power.

Worth reading in full.

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Jon Garvey
3 years ago

This shows it will not be sufficient to vote in a new government with commonsense policies. It will also have to be led by those radical enough to reform the civil service in a way easily spinnable as “totalitarian.” Trump proved how difficult that can be.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

It isn’t that at all although it might seem that way. Wokery doesn’t count for much with someone who is full of hope for the future and elan vitae. The issue is multi-faceted and much more serious than that. Just look at Edward Dowd’s numbers in terms of the rise in disabilty and mortality. Just the sense that there is barely a future left fighting for will demoralise many people. You have to be aware of the whole situation and you have to nurture this discernment to grasp the spirit of our times. Otherwise yours is a blinkered view and ultimately part of the evil.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

Like The Waterboys said, the whole of the moon.

transmissionofflame
3 years ago

I think we’ll lose but we’ll go down fighting, and humanity will one day rise again. But the satanists currently pulling the strings will have wasted millennia of progress. The world they end up with will be truly shit and ultimately won’t deliver even for them, because the amazing progress we have made in certain areas is enabled by all of the things that these bastards are working to destroy. I hope all their bridges collapse and all their aeroplanes fall out of the sky. Let’s see if they can still tell themselves the Emperor is wearing clothes.

DomH75
3 years ago

A few years ago, I had high hopes that in my lifetime I’d see life prolongation drugs and the positive aspects of transhumanism, for example being able to back up your memories externally and thus sidestep dementia. Now, we’re faced with a backwards lurch into mediaeval superstition.Live is going to be short and squalid again, overseen by mass surveillance devices on land and in space by our new feudal digital lords. The majority of people fighting against this civilisational collapse into a new dark age are now middle aged and older. Young people are doomed by the corrupted education system. When the Western Roman Empire collapsed, the Byzantine Empire continued for another 1,000 years and was arguably the saving of the West. Later, without Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire, there would have been no ancient texts transcribed and we would have lost the works of most ancient Western thinkers and artists, so there would likely have been no Renaissance and no Enlightenment. Now, we’re faced with a digital Dark Age where all our texts will be rewritten into subjective garbage and we’ll be in a Fahrenheit 451 scenario. Kenneth Clark talked about Skellig Michael, where the Christians and the… Read more »

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

Yes, these things go in cycles. I guess things could always be worse, but it’s frustrating to see the immense folly of throwing away so much good that has been built up.

DomH75
3 years ago

The Civil Service needs complete reform – all Western civil services do. When a new government comes in, it needs to be able to appoint its own civil servants, not inherit a cult of technocratic, lifer weirdoes and snobs from exclusive universities who see ordinary people as sheep to be manipulated. Trouble is, those lifer weirdoes would probably get jobs in big business, exacerbating the problem in the private sector. I’m from the so-called Oregon Trail generation (the mid-1970s’ mini-generation between Generation X and the Millennials) and now 48 years old, the child of a Post-War Bulge mother and a Silent Generation father. I’ve been working from home as a freelancer for just shy of three years now and can’t face the thought of going back to any office environment in the current climate. I can’t speak freely the way I used to and I know I’ll get into trouble because for my whole life I’ve lived with my foot in my mouth. When I get nervous, I crack jokes. The more nervous I get, the worse and more flippant the jokes get! I’m doomed in the modern workplace. Onetime, a girl I was working with was strong-armed by a… Read more »

DomH75
3 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

… analyse it through a lens of professional offence-taking! Bloody autocorrect!

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

I’ve been working from home …. for just shy of three years now and can’t face the thought of going back to any office environment in the current climate”

Snap. That’s me done now until retirement. My colleagues talk shit on Zoom but I can just mute them until the actual work bits start.

Steven Robinson
Steven Robinson
3 years ago

The unrelenting, soul-destroying wokery that now permeates every workplace and makes anyone to the Right of Chairman Mao feel like they don’t belong.
And with the ‘Conservative’ Party itelf looking more and more like the CCP (fortunately I don’t run the risk of losing the whip for making the comparison, though I appreciate I have crossed a line and it must be very offensive), the nation’s elected government is in fact just compounding the problem.

DomH75
3 years ago

You’re right. All the political parties have moved in a CCP direction. The technocracy that rules us (badly) is pure CCP. I will have to look hard at the ballot paper at the next election, because there’s little to vote for other than a least worst option.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

I don’t think that we can vote in another government, no matter how unusual. I think we have to accept certain realities. The Chinese call it the mandate from heaven, that for 400 years a power might be in charge ie. the British, and thereafter it moves on. We need to understand this 400 year cycle if we are to have any hope of survival in the fiture.

Hugh
Hugh
3 years ago

Someone on GB News of Catholic heritage saying he had never called for the dismantling of Oliver Cromwell statues. I maintain that people today in general are less tolerant than in the past. And certainly the “woke” mob.

DomH75
3 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Absolutely. The tolerance totalitarian cult is the most intolerant mob I’ve ever come from. Rather than accepting and learning from history, they want to tear down any trace of our ‘evil’ forebears, thus burying the lessons we learnt with them!

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

If you look at the glue holding society together you have to conclude that there is very little left. These are very different times.; No hope of youngsters to buy a house or have any life at all. The point is that you have to stare at reality without flinching. Otherwise it is just crazy boomer optimism. I would love to be proved wrong but I know where this is going. The first step is complete frankness and honesty.

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
3 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

I live in a 1,300 population 98% white village where the non-whites are mainly the mixed-race children of white women and black men who, what a surprise, buggered off.

There is still a lot of societal glue here.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

There isn’t gong to be some magical monent in March whereby people will get a sudden bolt of energy. The movement by and large is downwards. Old and young there is no pretending that this is some sort of blip. And there isn’t soem sort of slope out of this situation. Real comprehension lies in acknowledgment of where we are now and asking the question, do I have the energy to fight this? You must answer honsetly.

stewart
3 years ago

No big shock.

The civil service and the NHS are bastions of socialist central planning. The people who are attracted to and and thrive in those environments are people who love to tell others what to do and how to behave.

Masks, jabs, politically correct language, they don’t care whatever entitles them to control others. They are going to be so happy when carbon rationing is brought in. One more thing to allow them to behave like our masters.

DomH75
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

All the people of my age who work in the Civil Service are complete communists. The ones who work for the Home Office in London also own their own homes and cars, while stating (at a dinner party I had the misfortune to attend) that the rest of us plebs really don’t need our own homes and should also rent cars.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
3 years ago

You have to look at the economic history of the last fifty years. If you were a beneficiary then how much can you really object given that the last fifty years were essentially preparation for this. How much could you have been expected to know? I would dwell on the question if I were you.

Scunnered
3 years ago

My father is 75, still working; Civil Engineer (aka a BS-free zone). He started to notice pronouns in signatures in his latest company, on one occasion from a they/them. So he copied and pasted the signature in the body of his reply, put a strikethrough through the pronouns and typed PLEASE EXPLAIN alongside them. Oh, my sides when he relayed this story; threatening to retire for years (and is highly specialised – bridge design) so he really doesn’t give a hoot.

Miss Dolly
Miss Dolly
3 years ago
Reply to  Scunnered

Wonderful response. We should all do the same.

Human Resource 19510203
Human Resource 19510203
3 years ago

The things that are wrong with this country will not be fixed through a ballot box. That must be obvious to all by now.

RTSC
RTSC
3 years ago

I suspect Allison is right for those who work/ed in the Public Sector and large, city-based private sector organisations.

I gave up my Civil Service job a few years ago (I’d had enough of the chaos and wokery then … it must be 10 times worse now). I relocated to a small west country town, downsized and got “a little job” to see me through to retirement.

I now work for a small, private business which has around 25 employees and it’s great. Not a whiff of political correctness or wokery; no Cultural Marxism training courses; no “permanently offended” and there’d be no pandering to them even if one appeared.

Corky Ringspot
3 years ago

I’m 59 and I’m a washed-up loser anyway – but while what Allison Pearson describes is bad for boomers, it’s even worse for those unusual employees who are young but also driven mad by woke nonsense. My son is 26 and autistic. It’s been a long, long struggle for him (and his parents…) but he’s finally got himself an office job with Norwich county council, and things are looking…do-able. My son has some strident views of a non-woke kind – some a bit too strident even for me – and autistic people (depending on their ‘kind’ of autism) tend to just blurt things out. But he’s learning the appalling lesson that he has to be careful about how freely he talks about things. He’s only been doing this job a few days and so far he hasn’t encountered anything likely to produce an outburst; but I kind of expect it at any moment. I shouldn’t live in expectation like this, but you get used to it as the parent of an autistic kid. He somehow got through a university course at South Bank ‘University’ a while back – not quite as demanding as maths at Cambridge or classics at Oxford… Read more »

RTSC
RTSC
3 years ago
Reply to  Corky Ringspot

I have 12 years’ experience of the Civil Service (I left 6 years ago). The wokery will be far worse now than it was, and I couldn’t stand it even then.

Your son is to be congratulated for getting a job with Norwich Council but he’s always going to struggle with the wokery which permeates the public sector. If he can stick it out for a couple of years to gain experience/a work record, he’d be far happier in a small private sector organisation. (See my comment below).

If you’ve successfully brought up an autistic son, you are definitely no loser 🙂

Good luck to you both.

Corky Ringspot
3 years ago
Reply to  RTSC

Nice of you to say so. I’ll bear your comments very seriously in mind. Good advice, thanks.

Sinor
Sinor
3 years ago
Reply to  Corky Ringspot

Hi Clive.I live out in the wilds of Mid Norfolk..If its the County Council your son works for its probably std UK Public sector woke stuff.Be thankful he does not work for Norwich City Council which has been a bastion of right on Leftist bollxx for ever and would probably be a x5 wokery over the county council..Being a parent is tough so well done as it sound like sanity prevails with your son ..

Rowland P
Rowland P
3 years ago

“This problem won’t be solved at the ballot box”. Well, no it won’t if people cannot seem to break away from the LibLabCon status quo and voting for the least worst option “to keep the other lot out”. Think outside the box as they say and support the Heritage Party which has a robust anti-woke manifesto. If you profoundly disagree with it then you may also be tainted with wokery.

The Walrus
The Walrus
3 years ago

I plan on retiring early from my university position next year, partly for the very reasons listed here.

Sinor
Sinor
3 years ago
Reply to  The Walrus

Hi W .I have a friend who works for the UEA and she struggles with it all to.The thing that really gets my goat though is that ,in her area , there management is very poor and none of them would last 5 minutes in the real world of the SME private sector .It seems all about entitlement .

Epi
Epi
3 years ago

WFM (think about it) only about 20/30 years too late. WAKE UP!!!!!!!!!!!

varmint
3 years ago

Why would anyone in their fifties or sixties (especially if they are white) want to return to work in an environment where the world they thought they were living is being dismantled and de-constructed? Why would these people want “safe spaces” or “trigger warnings” or to work beside people who have come out of university having been taught “what to think” rather than “how to think” by Critical Social Justice Activists as their tutors? Why would they want to be in a workplace that seeks to “decolonise” everything from classical music which is seen as the work of “dead white men” first and a work of art last? Or where mathematics is not objective truth but one constructed by white people? Why work in a place where only you are the “racist”, because the management have decided they want to indulge in diversity and Identity Politics? Why live in fear of this dominant orthodoxy of wokery that pervades every bit of society that you dare not question or be sacked? If you don’t need the money and if you have plenty of friends and hobbies, then it would be utter madness to go back into this box ticking pretend to… Read more »