Race is an element of a nation’s social construct but it is unsatisfactory to look at it on its own.

We all live in ghettos. They may be in leafy Surrey, but they are as much ghettos as those of Bradford or Brixton. Of course in theory we can live where we choose to, if we can afford it. But generally we don’t. When I see the children leaving the very good State school just down the road from me they are predominately white, not exclusively so by any means, but mainly. In short our society is divided by race.

If your society is racially divided by geography these divides become institutionalised. Of course there is movement and, in theory, equality of opportunity. But opportunity is skewed by the demographics. The better schools are in the wealthier areas. There is a direct correlation between wealth and race. Statistically the richer a postcode is the whiter it is.

If from birth our chances are constrained by our race that surely is an institutionalised defect – a cause for regret. You may say that the problem is relative poverty rather than race, and you would be right. But the competitiveness in adult society favours those with the better financial resources at all stages. An employer is not permitted to discriminate in selection on racial grounds. Quite rightly. But he is permitted to discriminate based on his assessment of ability and potential. Education , certainly for first jobs, will be the signal of suitability – racially that means it is not a level playing field.

The key point here is that you cannot look at racism decoupled from economics. Very often BAME citizens are discriminated against not overtly because of their colour but because of their family’s relative lack of wealth and the consequences of poverty. Lifestyle and culture may influence this as well. The cultural norm in Britain is white, Anglo-Saxon and Christian. This brings with it behaviour, including dress and use of language, that is often different from those who grew up in Asian or Afro-Caribbean cultures. There is no rational cultural hierarchy but there is a hidden one, and that is institutionalised.

In short the issue is equality of opportunity, or the lack of it. Some would argue that the solution is the creation of a form of non racial “Britishness” that transcends race – a sort of “melting pot” outcome. But that would inevitably mean conformity to the majority norms and the disappearance of distinctive and different cultures. Do we really want this ? Are we going to encourage the closure of the mosques and temples? Of course not.

Race is an element of a nation’s social construct but it is unsatisfactory to look at it on its own. It’s much more complicated than that. Prejudice is inculcated in the human psyche however much we might prefer to deny this. What is institutionalised is the outcomes of daily, weekly, monthly small acts of prejudice which can, and often do, lead to discrimination. The playing field is very bumpy indeed and human nature is very resistant to change.

British society is still stratified by race just like it was in the days of Empire.

The upwardly mobile Tony Sewell

“People are super-sensitive about slavery.” Writes Matthew Parris today discussing the Sewell report.

“Super-sensitive” ? Well yes perhaps we are a bit. Write that Britain’s colonialism, of which slavery was a part, was a bit dodgy and you’ll soon be put right by those who laud the glory of Empire. Mention the export of deadly diseases to First Nations peoples which accelerated their genocidal destruction and you’ll be told about the bravery of the first settlers fleeing persecution. Explain how land confiscation by the white man had no legal basis and was theft and you’ll be advised about the road systems that these pioneers constructed. And on and on and on.

The essential premise of slavery was that black Africans could be transported thousands of miles from their homes and bought and sold. That they were not humans but the property of humans. Well yes that premise does make one a bit “super-sensitive”.

The Empire was built on the idea that race was hierarchical. Britons, naturally, at the top. Then through the subtle gradations of class, colour and wealth until you got to the manual labour at the bottom of the pyramid. In Adam Smith’s factors of production the trickiest one “Labour” was commoditised by the slave-owning entrepreneurs. The big strong savage sold for more than the less advantaged. Just like a cart horse. That also makes us super-sensitive.

There is no need for “controversy” nor for Jesuitical debate about whether racism is “institutionalised” or not. Let’s simplify things. British society is still stratified like it was in the days of Empire. Less formally so maybe but still the hierarchy is ever present. Tokenism is rife so if you’re a second or third generation black Brit with Caribbean heritage, a good education and a solid middle class style and accent you’ll do well. Maybe chair the odd Commission where you can deliver the comforting platitudes that your (white) masters want to hear. House of Lords fancy dress down the way for sure at the end of your upwardly mobile journey.

Meanwhile your distant cousins children and grandchildren struggle in the sink schools. The police will pull them aside ahead of their erstwhile white classmates if there’s a bit of trouble. The Crack dealers will see you as a potential recruit – you’ll “fit in” in this sub culture alright. And that also makes us a bit “super-sensitive”.

The Conservatives overt religiosity is another attempt to appeal to their core supporters

Except in Northern Ireland generally in Britain we don’t “Do Religion” (as Alastair Campbell once put it) in politics. Campbell’s boss Tony Blair was gradually moving towards the Catholicism of his wife Cherie but none of them thought this was anything but a private matter. Fair enough.

At a simplistic level it’s probably true that Tories, if they are Christians are C of E and Labour Methodists. Harold Wilson once said that Labour owed more to Methodism than Marx. And the Church of England was often referred to as “The Conservative Party at prayer” . But Ulster aside religion has rarely intruded into politics in modern times. So what’s up with the Conservatives “Good Friday” Party-promoting graphic?

As the Conservative government continues to look westwards to the United States, rather than eastwards towards Europe (a clear trend) we can see evidence of their embracing positions of the Republican Right. Deeply embedded in this group are the Religious Right. Donald Trump knew this and wholly bizarre though it was he, a serial philanderer with the morals of an Alley cat, conned them into thinking that he was one of God’s representatives on Earth . (I exaggerate, but not much).

Boris Johnson, whose personal morality is Trumpian, has not yet taken to openly waving the Bible in our faces, but maybe we shouldn’t hold our breath. Are there really votes in this ? Religion is, as Marx put it, the “opiate of the people” and that is certainly true of the Happy Clappy brigade in the Southern United States. But would it work here?

In times of stress we do all need props and to feel that someone is with us. Many have, in the past, turned to God in these moments. If for some multicultarism is part of that stress (it is) then religion is at the heart of it. A diversity that opponents of a mixed society very often object to is that of religion and, very specifically, Islam.

If voters that the Conservatives want to attract have, in many cases, a significant degree of Islamophobia the Tories know that they cannot appeal directly and overtly to that prejudice. During the EU Referendum campaign they did this with the barest modicum of subtlety:

The hidden message here was clearly Islamaphobic

For the Tories to proclaim their Christian faith is part of a positioning that contrasts with the support for multicultarism that characterises their opponents. Christians aren’t Muslims. There’s votes in that. Again there is a strong Trump parallel though, once again, with a tad more subtlety than the Donald.

It’s a time for facile symbolism it seems. Though our society is multi-religious the State religion is firmly Christian and in that sense the Conservative Party, by using the most sacred of Christian symbols in its promotion, is simply being mainstream. Flying the establishment flag again 🇬🇧 you might say. The nationalist positioning is clear. Like you we Tories are patriotically British, Christian and White. If you doubt the latter read the Sewell report. On the one side the overwhelming white establishment on the the other what is patronisingly referred to as “ethnic minorities”. Non whites.

For the past nearly a decade the Right in Britain has been characterised by what it is against. Europe. Immigrants. Asylum seekers. Liberals (=Woke). Muslims. The counter to these enemies is populist. “Britain is Best”. Restricted entry to foreigners. An anti-woke campaign against the liberal media. Overt criticism of the “Black Lives Matter” movement. And now promotion of the state religion and if this means hijacking the Cross to promote the Party so be it.

I don’t know whether Boris Johnson was, like me, a Crusader in his youth.

Crusaders – taking on the enemy sword of righteousness in hand ?

I don’t recall that part of the teaching on those Sunday afternoons and during the summer “Crusader Camps” was that we should retake Jerusalem from the Mohammedans. More Jesus wants me for a sunbeam. But let’s be clear to emphasise implicitly the sanctity of one religion on its holiest day is intended to set it apart from the philistines.

Can you have normal opera in abnormal times ?

The Times today describes how it is planned that Glyndebourne will operate this summer. As a full member my chances of getting tickets would be high, but I won’t be applying. To go to a production in normal times is one of the highlights of my summer. It’s pretty much a faultless experience. And one that really doesn’t need changing. But these are not normal times and it’s quite clear that as planned the festival cannot be what it should be.

Social distancing at Glyndebourne is not unknown. I remember one year a distinguished and rather snobbish patron who knew me reacted in a surprised way. “What on Earth are you doing here?” He said. I survived! But most of the time it’s a little bit of England that even the most rebellious member of the audience will be seduced by.

A half full auditorium and a plethora of other restrictions is not for me I’m afraid. I’ve had enough of abnormal this past twelve months – I’ll wait for the return of normality. Others will take a different decision and that is their call. And I admire Mr Christie for all he has done. I don’t know whether the long dinner interval will take place but if not surely this is a time for live streaming?

The psychology of this summer will force us to make a choice between “better than nothing” and “no ersatz experience thanks”. My avoidance of socially distanced events is my choice and I do not offer it as a recommendation. It’s not based on fear of the virus but on a personal unwillingness to accept second best. For me you cannot have normal opera in abnormal times.

Cameron’s choice of friends in his Oxfordshire idyll has never been particularly wise

Max Hastings writes scathingly of David Cameron in The Times today. It is an insightful and revealing piece.

Elitist ?…Moi?

Something, apart from schooling and a profound sense of entitlement, that Cameron shares with Boris Johnson is ignorance of the real world or even a working knowledge of it. There’s not much anyone can do about advantageous birth and the privileges that result from it. At the time that is. Eton and Oxford doth not a rounded person make. But after you come down from the dreaming spires the choice is yours. There’s a world out there to see and learn from, if you could be bothered. Dave wasn’t.

Cameron has never had a proper job in his life. In the pursuit of his political ambitions he held a number of sinecure jobs that family and connections found for him. But none exposed him to the world the vast majority of us live in. Harold Macmillan learned about “ordinary” people in the trenches. He never forgot this learning. Even Churchill, much posher even than Dave, rubbed shoulders with the hoi polloi from time to time. Cameron was and is uncomfortable outside his class milieu.

Cam and Sam glided effortlessly through life all the way to Number 10. The loss of a child seemed to give them a humanity and knowledge of the National Health Service. Cameron spoke movingly of their experience. But he didn’t build on it and in office his austerity programme damaged the Service he’d so recently praised. A charge of hypocrisy is not unfair.

We are looking at elitism here. The presumption that power, position and wealth gives you not just advantages but the right to them – to the Manor born. How ludicrously insensitive were those photographs when he bought his Shepherd’s Hut for £25,000 ? They can be show-offs all their lives these Bullingdon boys.

What Cameron allegedly did to feather his nest with his upwardly mobile Aussie mucker came from his inherited and refined sense of entitlement – and his associated disconnect from Right and Wrong . (See also fellow Buller Boris – the parallel is close). His choice of friends in his Oxfordshire idyll has never been particularly thoughtful or wise – but this takes “you scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours” to a new level.

You don’t solve a nation’s problems by putting out more flags

History teaches us that when patriotism is defined not by what we are and what we do and achieve but solely by our rhetoric and our symbols it is shallow and worthless. You don’t solve a nation’s problems by putting out more flags. Or by creating phoney “Values” when all around us is moral turpitude, xenophobia, corruption and pompous jingoism.

Symbols can trivialise and be designed to cover up failure. The same with slogans. At a time when Britain has chosen a path of nationalist disconnection from the world to spout nonsense about “Global Britain” is intellectually bereft of logic.

Flag-waving is not in itself patriotic, it needs a context. I was in the Olympic Stadium when Jessica Ennis won her Gold Medal back in 2012 – she proudly displayed the Union Flag a few yards in front of me. I cheered myself hoarse along with tens of thousands of others. I was proud of her and very patriotic. That flag meant something. Nobody told Ennis to wave the flag, nor me to cheer.

Totalitarian states need symbols to reinforce their hegemony and their power. Whether the symbol is a hammer and sickle or a swastika. Confident nations may display their flags and symbols with genuine pride, not to boast but to celebrate. But what matters is not their flag and symbol but why they are confident – it usually comes from respect. Wearing a Stars and Stripes badge on his lapel as he dragged America into the reputational mire didn’t make Donald Trump a patriot.

You can’t buy respect by wittering on about “Queen and Country” , by singing “patriotic” songs about our “glorious past” and by a surfeit of flags. My personal patriotism is at a low ebb , unsurprisingly given the shallowness of the politics all around us. But it’s not dead, just sleeping. Give me a reason to be proud of my country again and I’ll cheer myself hoarse again. Actions speak louder than words. Or flags.

Of course we all want to return to normality but let’s at last be driven by reason and science not populist politics

James Forsyth, embedded by the Government’s propaganda department in The Times, has yet another of his woefully unbalanced articles in that newspaper today. We wants us to take more risks, I kid you not.

A year into the biggest medical disaster to hit the world for more than one hundred years Britain is still blundering around in ignorance as Mr Forsyth’s characteristic parade of confusion shows. The problem is not risk aversion but a mindset stuck somewhere between insouciance and bravado. Do we know what we’re doing ? There are few signs that we do.

Empirical evidence is, or should be, the driver of decision making. Yes things have been handled better in Asia than here – most things are. But have we learned from that? Not much. A society that culturally matches ours closely, New Zealand, has handled the pandemic with skill, intelligence and leadership. Have we studied that in depth? Few if any signs that we have.

Arrogance along with the insouciance has been Britain’s downfall. A year ago the deadly threat of COVID was grossly underestimated here. When the Kiwis were taking rapid action we delayed and dithered. With deadly results. As we blathered with herd immunity claptrap others acted. Johnson was up there with Trump and Bolsonaro in his failures of judgment and action.

In truth herd immunity – a callous acceptance of genocidal level deaths – never went away. If you take that path then it requires mass vaccination – which is why this policy received such priority. If you want evidence that surreptitiously herd immunity was still the policy you need look no further than the speed and extent of implementing first dose vaccinations. We were told 20,000 deaths would be a “good result” – what does that make 130,000 ?

No country, other than Britain, has ignored the vaccine makers instructions over the gap between the first and second dose. These instructions were not serendipitous – they were based on empirical evidence. Science. Yet we’ve implied we’ve known better than the scientists and ignored them. Uniquely in the world. The result of this is yet to be seen.

We are still deep in the mire and there is zero credible evidence that a roadmap of gradual removal of grestrictions is appropriate. New cases are still happening in substantial numbers. Citizens are still dying. Of course we all want to return to normality but let’s at last be driven by reason and science not populist politics.

Cameron – To the Manor Born

David Cameron seems to have got himself into a bit of trouble – see Danny Finkelstein in The Times today . At the risk of being pompous I would say that I have always had an inbuilt sense of right and wrong. This is not based on religious faith still less on any moral code but on a combination of education, nurture and common-sense. I did go to a Methodist boarding school so maybe there was a subliminal absorption of principle. I claim no exceptionalism here. Surely most of us are the same?

But raise your eyes to those who think themselves born to rule and what is right can be blurred and very different. Take Britain’s last three Prime Ministers. Two of the three never had a moment’s doubt about their rights. The third was you or me – bright but ordinary. Struggling with life a bit as we all struggle with life from time to time. Unlike Theresa neither Dave nor Boris would call a memoir “My Struggle” . Because it hasn’t been.

That very posh school sets its pupils apart. It may not overtly preach its superiority these days but its culture is unquestionably elitist. All its pupils, bar a few token scholarship boys, come from the one per cent wealthy of our society (or its equivalent abroad). Eton’s dress code, rules, language and the rest combine to make its attendees different – and, by implication, superior in their eyes.

And when they get to Oxford, as many do building on their advantage? Well that Floreat Etona bond hasn’t gone away. The Bullingdon Club gave our two Etonian Prime Ministers in embryo an opportunity to reinforce their superiority. The “Bullers” broke the law to the manner born. Wrecking restaurants was part of that sense of entitlement.

If your whole childhood is predicated on privilege and a total absence of self-doubt that is your norm. And if a fellow Buller went to a “minor” public school , as George Osbourne did, he is insulted and called an “oik”. There is nothing more hierarchical than an Etonian.

In their years of employment there was no absorption of a wider social perspective for Dave of Boris. They didn’t get their hands dirty or find themselves exposed outside of their familiar class world. Johnson’s personal idiosyncrasies and character got him into trouble from time to time but he sailed effortlessly through sackings and career and marital setbacks. Cameron was squeaky clean, married into the aristocracy that gave him a milieu in which favours could be asked for and granted. All above board naturally.

So looking at the allegations of lobbying to feather your nest a bit seems not inconsistent with the privileges that went before. There is no Old Boy Network stronger than that of Eton and Oxford. And that, just like wrecking a restaurant, may have a touch of bending the rules about it. It’s not what you know it’s who you know, old boy.

Boris Johnson is a very obvious and particular sort of populist, and it works

There is a piece in The Times today describing the strength of Boris Johnson’s poll ratings. 😱

I suppose what it actually boils down to is what you see politics as being about. Call me naïve but surely at the very highest level it’s about doing your utmost to make lives better for the nation and all its citizens. A law of conflicting utility under which benefits for one group are accompanied by disadvantages for another makes that difficult. Judgment calls have to be made – you can’t please all the people all the time.

Boris Johnson is a very obvious and particular sort of populist. All his actions are based to show him in the best possible light among the target group of the nearly half of the electorate who like him. It’s brand management of a most particular kind. Unusually failures of competence that would be fatal for other politicians seem not to touch him, indeed the core support for his brand seems to grow in inverse proportion to the efficacy of his actions.

Whilst the populism drives the poll ratings Johnson also makes sure that his key supporters power base is kept sweet. The full story of the award of government contracts under the Johnson premiership has yet to emerge but even if there is a public enquiry, as surely there must be, Johnson will no doubt bluff his way through it.

If in doubt Put Out More Flags

The media is subservient. The failure of the BBC properly to hold the Government to account is unprecedented. Few of the print/online media do this either. Brave writers do put their heads above the parapet , including in The Times, but all too many turn a blind eye or get platforms for propaganda rather than reasoned argument. Including in The Times.

The failure of the Government’s handing of the pandemic ought to have led to Johnson’s “legacy” being as Britain’s worst Prime Minister of modern times – by far. 125,000 bereaved families is a pretty appalling disaster to have on your report card. A cabinet you chose without one obviously competent member bewilders political commentators who struggle to find precedents for this gruesome cabal of lightweights. But Boris sails on untouched.

Johnson is a gambler but he is a shrewd and lucky one. To ignore the manufacturers’ expert advice on the gap between virus jabs, and to be the only country in the world to do so, was an astonishing act of insouciance. He might get away with it but even if it goes seriously belly up, as it well might, he’ll probably bluster his way through.

The visual symbolism of the Johnson brand lies at the core of his popular appeal. Hence the flags. Patriotic populism is really all there is but doesn’t it just work? It lay behind Brexit – the sovereignty positioning of “Leave” was raw flag-waving populism. That has continued into Johnson’s premiership accompanied, as it was during the referendum campaign, by barely disguised anti-foreigner rhetoric. “Britain contra mondom” is a more accurate summation of our current declined status in the world than the preposterous “Global Britain” .

One of our houses of government is unelected and the other is chosen by an indefensibly undemocratic electoral system

There is a well-researched piece in The Sunday Times today revealing the bizarre absurdity of Britain still having hereditary peers in our Upper House of Government. But in truth this anachronism is wholly consistent with the void of democracy inculcated in our benighted state. The reality is that patronage has placed some very odd people in the House of Lords , it’s not just hereditary.

Passing over the indefensible anachronism of a hereditary Head of State (some otherwise sane countries do the same) the real iniquity is that one of our houses of government is unelected and the other is chosen by an indefensibly undemocratic electoral system .

The home of Democracy (sic) is riddled with unfairness, privilege and corruption. It’s like a Savoy Opera though with an establishment cast of characters even WS Gilbert would have rejected as too far-fetched.

If we need an upper chamber then it would hardly be a revolutionary act to decide to elect it. And to ensure that there was a better correlation between the votes a political party receives and the number of seats in the Commons it gets is not exactly a treasonous idea either.

If there is such a thing as “British Values” then “Silliness” is one of them. Look at a photograph of the unelected Lords in their pantomime robes and it beats Monty Python in its silliness. The farcical costume drama just makes us look like idiots. But the iniquitous electoral system runs the risk of a descent into dictatorship and at the moment we are some way down that slippery slope.

We lack checks and balances and one that we do have, the power of revision of the upper house, is sullied by the fact that those exercising that power are in place wholly undemocratically. And the House of Commons, by virtue of First Past The Post, bars the fair representation of political ideas that deviate from established norms. A Conservative vote in Islington, a Labour vote in Surrey and a Green vote almost anywhere is a wasted vote.

Constitutional reform is long overdue but wiil it happen when there are so many vested interests in the way ? Don’t hold your breath.