Dispatches did a good job exposing those who have been issued with licenses to print public money because Margaret Thatcher's father, to whom she barely spoke, had once been removed as an alderman, and because of Tony Blair's Howard Hughes-like fear of the "dirty" public sector.
If you believe that there ought to be a middle class for social and cultural reasons, then you have to believe in the political action necessary in order to secure that class's economic basis. Look at Britain today, and you will see the "free" market's overclass and underclass, with less and less of a middle except in the public sector. Public sector haters are no more in favour of a thriving middle class than they are in favour of family life, or British agriculture, or a British manufacturing base, or small business, all of which are likewise dependent on government action in order to protect them from the ravages of capitalism.
Yet take out bailouts or the permanent promise of them, take out central and local government contracts, take out planning deals and other sweeteners, and take out the guarantee of customer bases by means of public sector pay and the benefits system, and what is there left? They are all as dependent on public money as any teacher, nurse or road sweeper. Everyone is. With public money come public responsibilities. Including public accountability for how those responsibilities are or are not being met.
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Brilliant. Left-conservatism is a growing force as of course you know, and you are probably doing more to advance it than any other individual on the planet, certainly than any other writing in English.
ReplyDeleteOh, I don't know about that. There are plenty of us about: Lord Glasman, Neil Clark, Martin Meenagh, Tim Collard, and a good many more. Stuart Reid's Catholic Herald column has its moments, to say the least. And so on. So, yes, a growing force.
ReplyDeleteTalking of my old friend Neil Clark:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/76477,news-comment,news-politics,if-david-cameron-really-cares-he-will-act-on-unemployment