
The
Queen speaks – sort of
Through
an amazing, not to say unique, set of circumstances, Greasy Pole has
come into possession of an early draft of the Queen’s Speech to the
nation on Christmas Day. As usual, the speech makes an impressive
human document, covering a wide range of vital issues with the
customary insight, compassion and courage. However readers must bear
in mind that this is the first draft of the speech; when the
broadcast takes place it may turn out that some changes have been
made.
Tradition
Speaking
to you this Christmas Day, I am humbly aware that I am carrying on a
tradition begun by my grandfather and carried on by my father. We are
all agreed that tradition plays a vital part in our lives – we all
find comfort and security in the confidence that things will stay as
they are even if it would be much better to change them. Of course as
the Queen I am more in favour of this than most people – after all
it is tradition that is often used as a clinching argument for
keeping me and my family where we are. For so many of you, my
viewers, it would not come amiss if you had less regard for tradition
and more for thinking about re-organising society. But we won’t go
into that right now.
To
begin, let us look at what my government have been doing and what
they intend to do between now and next December 25. (You must not be
misled by the words “my government”, into thinking that I tell
Tony Blair and the rest what to do. The opposite is true; that is why
I am speaking to you today). My government continue to fight wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, which seem to have no end in sight. You may
recall that Mr. Blair and the other leaders assured us that Iraq
would be a quick, clean business and not another Vietnam. They did
not remind us then that the late President Johnson had promised the
American people that Vietnam would not be another Korea. What future
war, we may ask, will be justified on the grounds that it will not be
another Iraq? And how many will be killed while this is going on?
Rebuild
This
is not say that it has been all bad news from Iraq. If we can forget
the soldiers who have been killed and their grieving families and the
tens of thousands Iraqi corpses which testify to the murderous
efficacy, if not the unfailing accuracy, of American and British
weaponry, there is another side to the story. Bechtel, a big and
powerful American engineering company, has just finished a contract
to repair the water, power and sewage system in Iraq, supposedly to
the benefit of the people there. For this Bechtel were paid $2.3
billion by the American government. And what has been the result?
Well 52 Bechtel employees were killed during the work. Anything else?
The electricity comes on for only a few hours a day, for much of the
people there is no clean water supply and the sewage is largely
untreated. In a recent issue of the New York Times a professor
of economics wrote that “By any material measure, Iraqis are worse
off than they were under Saddam”.
Crime
is another matter which my government are vigorously tackling. Theft
may be all very well if it is the kind which allows one class to have
access to most of the wealth but not when someone tries to help
themselves outside the law. Violence is admirable when it is the
clean, clinical type guided out of the skies of Iraq by trained
people in uniforms but it is unacceptable when it is a few rowdies on
the street after closing time. So Mr. Blair’s ministers are
cracking down on it; they are planning to bring in more laws which
will enable courts to pass longer sentences on offenders. This will
almost certainly mean more people being sent to prison and I confess
I am a little puzzled by this; the government wants tougher sentences
because of the high re-conviction rate for released prisoners and it
seems rather odd that in these circumstances there should be plans to
imprison more people.
Farepak
We
can all remember Mr. Blair’s fine speech when he declared his
intention of being “tough on the causes of crime” – meaning a
crack down on problems like poverty in families, which is a standing
incentive to people to take what they see as the short cut of crime
to alleviate the pressures they are under. As part of this crackdown
the government set up the Sure Start scheme, heralded by Mr. Blair as
“…an idea (that) would lift all the boats on a rising tide”.
But now he has had to admit that It has not worked like that; he now
says that “…Their problems are so multiple…these families then
end up having five or six organisations dealing with them, but no one
is actually dealing with them. If we are to change that we need a
different way for government to operate”. (Of course he did not
really mean that last bit - governments “operate” as needed by
this social system, with its poverty and doomed schemes like Sure
Start).
An
example of this was the collapse of the company Farepak. Now I don’t
need to have anything to
do with Farepak because it was a firm which
promised to help people with very little money to save up, a little
at a time, for Christmas so that they could afford the turkey and the
drink and food and the presents for the kids. It is not clear how
many people were impressed by this idea; one estimate is that about
150,000 families were involved – another estimate is that their
“savings” amounted to about £41 million. And all this was
in the expectation that come Christmas they would get a nice hamper
or some high street vouchers. Except that, like Sure Start, it did
not work like that because Farepak’s parent company – European
Home Retail (EHR) – was in trouble over their overdraft with
Halifax Bank of Scotland. When it turned out that EHR was using the
savers’ money to pay off their bank loan Farepak collapsed, leaving
those hopeful families facing a very bleak Christmas. HBOS blamed
EHR for failing to have a “viable solution” to Farepak’s
problems. The chairman of EHR, Clive Thompson, retaliated that
Farepak had been “hung out to dry” by the bank.
Merry
Christmas
But
the sprit of Christmas, which I am recommending to you today as the
way out of the world’s problems, is not entirely dead. Clive
Thompson unburdened himself on BBC Radio, saying “I feel very
deeply for all those people who have been hurt by the collapse, in
particular those who saved for Christmas – which has been ruined”.
These charitable words were offered by someone who is a past
president of the Confederation of British Industry and who has sat on
the boards of six FTSE companies. Not to be outdone, the managing
director of Farepak, Gilodi-Johnson weighed in: “I am really gutted
that everybody has lost out like this”. Well yes.
So
there it is, this Christmas 2006. While one class in society enjoys a
securely affluent life style the other endures the kind of poverty
which sometimes requires them to put together scraps of money in
order to survive a paltry holiday. Huge corporations make massive
profits from war and the ensuing social strife. All of this at a time
when we are told that this is a season of peace and goodwill. It
suits me and the class I represent, to believe that. But you?
Merry
Christmas.
Suckers.
IVAN
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