Friday, 25 March 2011

Maybe, Mary, Your ‘Sixth Sense’ Is Simply Wrong?

Mary Dejevsky, eavesdropping at the hairdressers:
Within the sound of Big Ben, heated conversations were going on between stylists and clients about how the Government was intent on privatising the NHS, how disabled people were going to have to choose between enforced work and penury, and how cuts in benefits were going to drive "the likes of us" out of London.
Well, obviously what’s being discussed in Mary’s hairdressing salon is also on the minds of milkmen in Derwent, plumbers in Devon, and used-car salesmen in Gwent, I think you’ll find…
I happen to disagree. This is not how I read government plans at all, and I have access to the statements and other primary sources to support my quite different and more benign interpretation.
So why don’t you put them right?
But you don't start challenging the consensus in the hairdresser's. You don't start arguing with your taxi-driver either, at least if you want to get where you are going…
Funny, I’ve often said ‘Actually, no, I believe that…’ and remained unscalped and not abandoned in the middle of nowhere.

So it can be done.

All right, so a couple of anecdotes taken from a single day hardly warrant elevation to the status of a MORI poll as evidence for the state of the nation. But there are times when a sixth sense tells you that the weather is about to change.

And mine tells me that, after a relatively quiescent nine months, give or take the odd student demonstration, the Coalition has started to lose its battle for voters' hearts and minds.

Evidence for this, other than the overheard conversation? None. It's just Mary's 'sixth sense'.

And I don't get the same picture from my friends and colleagues.
It might be objected that there was never a time when the Coalition really had the public on its side; that its Conservative-Liberal Democrat make-up was always a minority taste, well before it embarked on any policies. Anyone who believes that, though, must explain why autumn and winter have both passed so peacefully, despite a host of threats from a wide variety of vested interests, and why, through all these months, Labour was unable to harness so many malcontents to its cause.
I think you’ll find that, despite the best efforts of those malcontents, spring and summer are going to be the same.
Efforts to drum up indignation on behalf of those who really will lose from next month – parents on higher-rate tax who will forfeit child benefit, households with double the average income who will no longer qualify for tax credits, those whose pay falls within the new threshold for higher rate tax – generally failed dismally. The higher personal tax allowances produce far, far more winners – which is why George Osborne in his Budget on Wednesday repeated the trick for the next financial year.
Indeed. And this weekend, we have the unedifying spectacle of the Labour Party and their hangers-on wreaking havoc in London, in a few hours from now.

And if you think that the tide is turning against the coalition, just wait until you see how quickly it’ll turn against the demonstrators, should last march’s disgusting scenes be repeated.
So why, if the consensus for benefits reform, in particular, was demonstrably there, and ministers generally did a good job of highlighting the ample opportunities to reduce waste in the public sector, has the public mood changed?
Maybe because it really hasn’t. And you’re wrong?

5 comments:

  1. If Mary keeps straining like that she'll poo in her pants.

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  2. Gadaffi has the right idea about what to do with 'demonstrators'.

    PS. Has anything in the UK in the last 50 years, changed because of a demonstration?

    So what's the point?

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  3. The point seems to be to get out on the street and wave placards at the people who elected a government you personally don't like.

    That's assuming any of the marchers actually voted themselves.

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  4. She does have a point about not starting an argument in a hairdressers.

    I try and keep my mouth shut in public when I hear people spouting nonsense like "Britain is an over-crowded island" or "Rich people don't deserve child benefit" because people simple refuse to accept any sort of factual or logical approach to any particular issue.

    If you present people with facts and logic they just either refuse to listen or they get really aggressive (especially the Home-Owner-Ists, they get actually violent).

    There are some people who can hold two equally stupid but opposing views simultaneously, like being in favour of means-testing and of the contributory principle (both are shit, but actually they cancel each other out).

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  5. I've never had that problem with any of the people serving me. Maybe they just keep their thoughts to themselves in anticipation of the tip?

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