Britain Isn’t Doomed – It’s Always Like This
I tend to be someone who thinks this country is basically finished. Hence my recent article ‘England is Lost Forever’. Not my most subtle title.
Listeners of the Weekly Sceptic will know our Glorious Leader Toby Young is somewhat more optimistic. And now we have another optimist (sort of) in the form of Tom McTague, who claims in UnHerd that Britain has pretty much always been on the verge of collapse, at least in the eyes of the doomsters and gloomsters. Here’s an excerpt:
Have things ever been so grim? Given the depressing reality of contemporary Britain — with the endless stories of sleaze and decay, decline and division — it is easy to draw that conclusion. Surely the NHS has never been this dire, the union this fragile or the country’s economic prospects this bleak? Surely we’ve never had a Government, or a parliament, quite so devoid of ideas and ambition? For those, like me, who find themselves asking these questions more regularly than ever, there is a salve of sorts available: modern British history. If you think you’re living through the worst of times today, think again — it’s usually like this.
Over the past few months, researching a book on Britain’s long, troubled relationship with Europe, I have found a strange solace in the almost seasonal nature of our national life, with its endless wintery crises (usually involving the weakness of the pound and our ability to pay our way) that eventually give way to spring-like calms. Ben Pimlott’s biography of Harold Wilson, for example, is like a thunderstorm of charm and disorder, short fixes and political escapism. There was, of course, plenty of honour and achievement along the way, but as you turn the final page, you cannot help but wonder what it all amounted to. Here was a magical politician who dominated British politics for more than a decade, only to fade from national consciousness with alarming speed, his ghost barely even troubling the minds of his successors let alone haunting them. Today, Wilson is back in vogue as the man who finally ended 13 years of Tory rule, a favourite of Keir Starmer and some Sixties nostalgics, but this was a man almost broken by his own decline — and his country’s.
Wilson, though, is the rule in this regard, not the exception. A similar air of despondency hangs over almost all of Britain’s post-war leaders up until 1979, each of whom fixated on the notion of British decline but were unable to escape its clutches.
Admittedly, to call this optimism is stretching things, but I understand the claim that we are by no means in uniquely bad times. Though this sidesteps the issue of mass immigration, which of course increased radically from 1997 onwards. Not to mention the illegal migrant problem, the escalating insanity of the culture war, and the existence of Nicola Sturgeon. I could go on. But McTague claims:
For Britain, the truth is that our crises are never quite as important as we imagine — and nor are our leaders.
To illustrate the point, here’s a challenge: when was the last time a British Government or prime minister pro-actively achieved something of lasting importance, addressing some great strategic threat before it became an existential challenge? The disasters are far easier to list, but not the lasting achievements. Did any of Gordon Brown, David Cameron, Theresa May, Boris Johnson or Liz Truss leave us with any lasting monument to progress? It is hard to think of one. They largely managed crises — or, more often, caused them.
Here he is on more solid ground. Though he goes on to argue that even Thatcher is overrated, which will irk many.
Still, whether you agree or not, it is worth reading in full.
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It’s good to try to keep cheerful, but I am afraid I feel we are facing the worst crisis since the late 1930s. Never before have we seent the simultaneous failure and capture of all of our institutions: government, the media, the universities, schools and even industry. I work for a large multi-national corporate organisation and even there we are in the grip of wokism and routinely have to listen to propaganda on the environment, race and so on. McTague is right that we have always lurched from one crisis to another, but at least there was a plurality of thought. Now we only have the alternative media to hold together a rag-tag coalition of skeptics and libertarians while the masses walk in lockstep to the tune of the global elites. And while our economy has always been precarious, apart from a brief moment in the 80s, not only are we screwed but the whole world is too. I wish I could see a bright futue but it’s hard right now.
The last 3 years have been an awakening for many people, me included although in my case from a restless fitful sleep rather than a deep restful one.
That implies that the dystopian control we are subjected to and has become so apparent during covid was actually long in the making.
The best analogy I can think of is when East Berliners woke up one day to find a wall being hastily built around west Berlin. They had been under communist rule for years but the wall must have been a moment of realisation of the crudeness off their situation.
Digman: Your interpretation of our current predicament is far more realistic and relevant than Mr McTague’s “it’ll be alright on the night”sunday magazine gloss. The problem with unherd is that their journalism is simply lightweight. Our political system is now in our face corrupt, the civil service, upper echelons at least are running their own show, the Bank of England is corrupt, the MSM is now simply a criminally bent outlet for the Davos Deviants, the NHS is staggering to the point of implosion, our plod forces are useless woke outlets of idiocy and incompetence, the education system has become a WEF directed brainwashing unit designed to turn out blindly unthinking climate zealot libtards, and our local councils and boroughs are turning in to pseudo mafia political fiefdoms which exist solely to enable a further level of taxation on the populace. Science, real science at which we once led the world has been reduced to ‘The $cience’ the proponents of which would struggle to understand current O’ level physics but the wages are good. Freedom of speech / expression has resulted in the birth of a much needed ‘Free Speech Union’ and which has grown in just three years to… Read more »
Well said hp
Thanks DBB
Things have always gone in cycles, but that doesn’t mean that we can afford to just hope for the best. Things have been righted by each individual making choices to nudge things in a direction they thought was right.
It’s arguably that the dangers are more acute than ever now, though, because of the potential for control and destruction offered by technology.
Indeed. There will always be people that want to control others, always be sleaze and moral bankruptcy, always be a problem to fix. The difference today is the power of technology, which is overlooked by most. It doesn’t connect us, it divides us, and the division is controlled. Mobile phones are now a drug, and should be treated as such… I’m battling the addiction myself.
Yes, a drug.
I remember my Grandfather refusing to watch the BBC in 1968, my Grandmother switching off the radio or television whenever Harold Wilson came on.
The 1970s were shockingly bad in this country which is why Mrs Thatcher achieved legendary status despite increasing public spending in nine of her eleven years as PM.
But lockdown, vaccine, mask mandates, the sidelining of parliament, combined with a ‘de haut en bas’ insouciance at the highest level in government regarding their own imposed rules is a new low.
I remain incredulous, shocked, horrified and incandescent at the goings on of the last three years.
Regarding the vast majority of my fellow citizens and their bovine subservience, words fail.
We have drifted, asleep, from a liberal capitalist democracy into a “democratic’ socialist fascist state.
Sam Smith has just rubber stamped ( if you’ll pardon the pun 😵💫) the cultural demise of the UK , I’m no prude but FFS !!!!!….
I wouldn’t be so worried if England was still populated by the English. But it isn’t. Therefore any comparison with muddling through in the past is missing a very large point.
The England I was born into 60-odd years ago has been obliterated during my lifetime. It bears no resemblance to the England of my childhood and youth.
Currently, roughly 85% in England are white and their families will have lived here for generations – even the very small number of those descended from Huguenots can be counted in this group since genetically they aren’t so very different from those descended from Norman-French.
In 10 years time when the people born in the 1940s have gone, the percentage will drop to around 70% white native English, thanks to mass immigration from Asia and Africa.
And in 20/30 years, when the post-war baby-boomers have gone, England will be minority white native English.
It is unstoppable now, even IF we had a political class which wanted to stop it.
Everything about the England I was born into has been utterly destroyed by the England-loathing Establishment.
I refuse to celebrate it.