The author would like to point out that as he goes about criticising ignorance, poor understanding, bias, the objectification of women, ineffectiveness in British Government and the secular nature of modern society, he is in no way guilty of anything he accuses other people of. Honest.

Sunday 26 December 2010

On boundaries and making changes

I don't know whether or not you've ever seen knots flying along the banks of the Wash. I hadn't either until tonight's Countryfile. The knot is a type of bird (apparently), and as the tides come in so they 'take to the skies in search of food'. The end result looks like this:



On the TV it looks very much like those pictures of the schools of fish you see. The flight moves almost as one organism, reacting to the world around it even though you know that none of the birds within can be conscious of that fact. Instead, without realising what they're doing, each bird creates or has created for them their own boundaries. Within these they move and adjust - shaping and being shaped by the general whole. 

It's a jump, but not too large a one I like to think, between nature and society. After Countryfile, via some time spent with the Top Gear crowd, came Upstairs, Downstairs. In that show there was quite a pertinent line from the driver to the lady of the house's sister. 'There are rules Miss', he reminded her as she sought to flout them, 'And you have to obey them just like us'. 

Of course rules are sometimes there to be broken. The 20th century, at the very least, is ripe with those who sought to overturn unfair and unjust regulation for the common good. Yet one fact remains. We keep on, no matter what, constructing rules for ourselves. Naturally many of these are necessary. Views on why it is important change and are disputed, but all the same most societies hold fast to some sort of generalised edict against wilful private killing. I still think though that given the option most prefer conservatism to radicalism. 

Know your audience
Now you may look at that, compare it to the injustices you see in society still, and argue that we are still too judgemental, too prejudicial. 'Viva la Revolution!' - and all that jazz. Perhaps you're right. In many ways you may just be. We are too inclined to consider that once a major change is made then that's it. Women have the vote, and a legal right to equal pay chaps. All the major demands of the suffragettes have been met on paper. Let's pack up the equality bandwagon and cart it off round the back. If calls for 'equality' mean anything (and I'm not entirely sure what they do mean), then surely it is an ongoing process. Much like conversion to religious faith, converting society to a new position takes time, effort and does not stop with the signing of the forms. It is an ongoing process, one that needs constant change and development and may involve some backsliding from time to time. When it does, we pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and try all over again.

I forget who originated the phrase 'going with the grain of society', but it's one that I like to remember when thinking about things like this. Society is in need of change constantly. If nothing else it keeps it alive - a culture that ossifies dies. Given my faith this is something of a hypocritical point, but I doubt the ability of people to enact sudden, lasting change in society though. Eventually as far as I can see something will snap back. Forces will rise that insist that we keep on the old, known path. 

One of the points that gets overlooked quite often to my mind is that Christ was an artisan. Well, probably did carpentry at some time. In truth we know nothing much of his life between when he preached in the Temple aged 7 and when he began his Ministry aged 30. As I understand it though the Greek tekton - which is how Joseph is described in the Bible - indisputable means some form of artisan or builder. It seems fair enough to me to assume that at some point during those 23 years, he either joined Joseph or observed him doing some work. This seems a fair metaphor for enacting change. 

The picture to the left here is of the new Reading Room at the British Museum. The columns you can
see behind it, if memory serves, are made from marble mined on the Isle of Purbeck in Dorset. The marble here would be our social change - taken from its original place and adjusted, through constant, hard work to take up a new and important role. Trying to enact social change should be something we strive for. Churchill apparently once said that 'What is the use of living, if it be not to strive for noble causes and to make this muddled world a better place for those who will live in it after we are gone?' (though I got that from Wikiquote, so it needs to be checked). There is a reason though, I think, why a maxim often attributed to him is still repeated: 'If you're not a liberal when you're 25, you have no heart. If you're not a conservative by the time you're 35, you have no brain'. We all shape, and in turn are all shaped, by the society in which we live and work. That is unavoidable, even if one does take inspiration and refuge elsewhere too. Societies though are big, cumbersome things that often take time to shift and alter. They can wobble when 'hit' strongly, but tend too often I find to reset not long afterwards. Our temporary revolutionaries meanwhile find that they too are ultimately forced to fit within the mould. Sometimes they 'mature' in their faith, sometimes they find that they prefer power, and sometimes simple family circumstances force them to settle rather than overthrow. Lasting revolutions are rare, and too often bloody. 

Well this has been a long rant, and I'm in need of sleep. A summation? Alright - it is easy to be a revolutionary with a song in your heart, a chant on your lips and a slogan on your posters. Often such people are necessary, but to my mind a necessary evil. By this I don't mean that they themselves are 'evil'. Sometimes people do just need to openly, and firmly, buck the system - Rosa Parks, for instance, or Ghandi. If this blog post is a rallying cry for anything, it is for the long-term, quiet revolutionary who tries to change the world not with a gun or a rallying cry, but with a phone book and a pencil. 

To conclude, then, Merry Christmas to you all and a Happy New Year - and an example. 

In 1963 John Profumo was a rising star within a dying Government. Secretary of State for War, he was married to an actress, independently wealthy, and big things were spoken of his future. Then he went and had an affair with Christine Keeler, a model and essentially a high-class prostitute. Affairs during this period were reasonably common. Dorothy MacMillan, the Prime Minister's wife, had had a long-standing affair with the Conservative backbencher Robert Boothby. Profumo though had a particular problem. Keeler had not just been seeing him during this period. She had also been having a relationship with Yevgeni Ivanov, the senior Soviet Military Intelligence officer in London. 

Being a naughty boy was one thing. Being a naughty boy and endangering national and international security quite another. Profumo resigned in disgrace, leaving both the Government and Parliament. He was 47 at the time. 

John Profumo is widely judged nowadays (he died in 2005) to have had a very good retirement. A few months after his resignation he arrived at Toynbee Hall, a charity in London's East End devoted to solving social problems. He worked initially as a volunteer cleaning toilets. He was there for the rest of his life; ending up as the Hall's chief fund-raiser. He almost never spoke of his work, and resolutely refused to publicise the fact that he had by 1990 been at Toynbee Hall for longer than he'd been in Parliament. 

John Profumo did not change the world, except vicariously and in ways that he'd never wanted. He did however work quietly and conscientiously to change a corner of it. You may argue that he did so to appease his conscience. I prefer to think that he realised his mistake, and sought in a small way to make a difference as a result. 

Sunday 19 December 2010

Tuition Fees - A response to some issues raised

Hello,

My previous post has garnered some feedback. Here are some thoughts on the points raised.

Firstly, I should acknowledge that my post on 'Thoughts on Protesting' was influenced too much by my own feelings. The fact is that I was considerably irritated at having my class disrupted and wished to vent it. As Mademoiselle has pointed out to me, protest of this kind only really works if it is disruptive to normal practice.

The second point was raised by Abacus of Cockmarsh, who questioned why we have tuition fees at all. Abacus has considerably more financial knowledge than me. Privately he has questioned whether or not the fees system in this country amounts to a PFI scheme, in the sense that the debt is transferred from the current generation onto the next.

So, my responses:

As I've said, I agree with Mademoiselle that my previous post was too much coloured by my own irritation and annoyance. Nevertheless I would hold by several points that I made there. The attacks upon the royal car, and the posting of dog excrement through Nick Clegg's letterbox go beyond what is acceptable, in my view, in that they attack directly and indirectly people who have no responsibility for the tuition fees question. I would argue that successful protests are normally focussed on the one particular weakness rather than a broad blast against an enemy.

On the question of tuition fees in general, I defer to the more knowledgeable man about their effectiveness. The fact is though that they are here to stay unless something drastic happens. I think my views on a rise in fees have been best outlined elsewhere.

Thursday 9 December 2010

Tuition Fees - some thoughts on protesting

Hello,

Well it's through. Not much surprise there, though I was expecting a narrower majority than 21.

I'm finishing off marking in the office at the moment, so don't expect any thoughts as to what's going to happen in HE now for a while. There was something I wanted to say about what's happened this afternoon though. Mainly about protesting.

The Peter Chalk building on campus here is mostly used for lectures and events. I'm told that yesterday evening and throughout today that Newman A, a lecture theatre in the building, has been occupied by students protesting against the fees increase. I can understand their anger, even though I may not entirely agree with it. However I would say that I cannot see how effective the occupation of Newman A would be. It will not change the government's policy, nor the university's support of that policy. It will disrupt a day's lecturing and make several people's work more stressful for minimal reward.

Likewise this afternoon my class was interupted by chanting outside. Protesting should be carefully targetted, or it will simply end up being counterproductive.

Rant over.

Later: Oh it gets worse. I read later that the royal car was attacked. These are two people who despite your views on elitism have nothing to do with the passing of the tuition fees bill. All you are doing is harassing two pensioners effectively.

Even later: Dog excrement through Nick Clegg's letterbox? Oh come on. You might seriously dislike the man but he has two young children and a wife that has nothing to do with this. That's just abuse.