Register a SA Forums Account here!
JOINING THE SA FORUMS WILL REMOVE THIS BIG AD, THE ANNOYING UNDERLINED ADS, AND STUPID INTERSTITIAL ADS!!!

You can: log in, read the tech support FAQ, or request your lost password. This dumb message (and those ads) will appear on every screen until you register! Get rid of this crap by registering your own SA Forums Account and joining roughly 150,000 Goons, for the one-time price of $9.95! We charge money because it costs us money per month for bills, and since we don't believe in showing ads to our users, we try to make the money back through forum registrations.
 
  • Locked thread
Thanks Ants
May 21, 2004

#essereFerrari


Nobody cares about his shoes. I wore walking shoes all day yesterday because the ground was icy, and I couldn't be hosed to take anything smarter with me

Adbot
ADBOT LOVES YOU

Plank Sanction
Nov 3, 2016

Who invented the skip?

Lord of the Llamas posted:

The Mash Report is just pretty poo poo overall.

What's the general opinion on The Mash Report? I watched the first episode and thought it was awful. Ignored it, then watched last week's and it raised a few smiles. Seemed let down by the 'silly' news report bits, but I liked the bit with Chris Williamson in it. Quite like Nish Kumar as well.

Microplastics
Jul 6, 2007

:discourse:
It's what's for dinner.
Thanks coffeetable for your informative posts, I'll be doing some further research later. Incidentally I currently donate 2.5% (I think?) but I've been moving up so often recently that I'm well overdue for bumping that up considerably

Firos
Apr 30, 2007

Staying abreast of the latest developments in jam communism



Plank Sanction posted:

What's the general opinion on The Mash Report? I watched the first episode and thought it was awful. Ignored it, then watched last week's and it raised a few smiles. Seemed let down by the 'silly' news report bits, but I liked the bit with Chris Williamson in it. Quite like Nish Kumar as well.

It’s good enough for me to watch on my lunch break at work. But that’s not a massively high bar.

learnincurve
May 15, 2014

Smoosh
Good job he didn’t notice the wellies with a big pink spot on them...

Josef bugman
Nov 17, 2011

Pictured: Poster prepares to celebrate Holy Communion (probablY)

This avatar made possible by a gift from the Religionthread Posters Relief Fund
Well some good news. My colleagues and I are getting a very small pay rise at work. Now it is going to be £9.00 an hour. Which is better but not exactly something I can really "live" on in London.

CoolCab
Apr 17, 2005

glem

Cerv posted:

once indoors why didn't he change into more appropriate shoes and leave the boots to dry?
i sense this could this be the next empty seats on the train scandal

if there's snow on the ground you're allowed to wear boots - this should be passed into law as it is a fundamental human freedom

coffeetable
Feb 5, 2006

TELL ME AGAIN HOW GREAT BRITAIN WOULD BE IF IT WAS RULED BY THE MERCILESS JACKBOOT OF PRINCE CHARLES

YES I DO TALK TO PLANTS ACTUALLY

JeremoudCorbynejad posted:

Thanks coffeetable for your informative posts, I'll be doing some further research later. Incidentally I currently donate 2.5% (I think?) but I've been moving up so often recently that I'm well overdue for bumping that up considerably

That's fantastic! In that you already give 2.5%, in that you're thinking about upping it, and that you're going to do some more research. Good going :)

And it's also nice to know that at least some of the time I spend posting here helps make the world a better place. Thanks.

Irony Be My Shield
Jul 29, 2012

The biggest problem with Mash Report for me was how hard they overlaboured a lot of the jokes. Like in the headlines section you'd often have a 'newsreader' deliver a joke then cut to a 'reporter' who'd just make the same joke again twice and more slowly. I really liked Parris' section though.

R. Mute
Jul 27, 2011

TheRat posted:

Who needs satire when you've got poo poo like this

https://twitter.com/robaeprice/status/968893931239890945
Ever since I found out what Guido Fawkes looks like, I've been a firm believer that satire is dead.


The Guido Fawkes team. From left: sketch writer Simon Carr; news editor Harry Cole; new recruit Alex Wickham; and blog founder Paul Staines. "We were going for 'obnoxious Ron Burgundy'," Wickham says of the team vibe for this shot.

Jippa
Feb 13, 2009

TheRat posted:

Who needs satire when you've got poo poo like this

https://twitter.com/robaeprice/status/968893931239890945

What the hell are "bowling sneakers"?

Darth Walrus
Feb 13, 2012

Jippa posted:

What the hell are "bowling sneakers"?

The special shoes they give you at a bowling alley, presumably.

Xaerael
Aug 25, 2010

Marching Powder is objectively the worst poster known. He also needs to learn how a keyboard works.

Went outside in Sheffield snow report:

People who can't drive in snow need to stop loving driving in snow. Especially in a city that's pretty much 100% steep hills.
Multiple ditched cars.
Two collisions.
One total clusterfuck pileup.
Acrid stench of dead clutches everywhere. (Buy your Kwik-Fit shares now!)
Lots of grinning, giggling Children being dragged around on sleds by tired looking parents.

Not Operator
Jan 1, 2009

Not A doctor, THE Doctor!

Xaerael posted:

Went outside in Sheffield snow report:

People who can't drive in snow need to stop loving driving in snow. Especially in a city that's pretty much 100% steep hills.
Multiple ditched cars.
Two collisions.
One total clusterfuck pileup.
Acrid stench of dead clutches everywhere. (Buy your Kwik-Fit shares now!)
Lots of grinning, giggling Children being dragged around on sleds by tired looking parents.

MAD MAX IS HAPPENING

DAVIS YOU PROMISED US!

Microplastics
Jul 6, 2007

:discourse:
It's what's for dinner.
Oh it's Mad Max but the cold wet version? Typical Britain, even our post-apocalyptic hellscapes are poo poo.

Not Operator
Jan 1, 2009

Not A doctor, THE Doctor!
Mad Max but all the cars are snowed in. Load of shite, imo.

Lobster God
Nov 5, 2008
Went on the UCU March in Sheffield today- good turnout, despite the snow, and a fair bit of support from passers by.

Speeches were a bit tame by UKMT standards, but lots of cheers/clapping for mentions of Labour party support and for Corbyn.

TACD
Oct 27, 2000

R. Mute posted:

Ever since I found out what Guido Fawkes looks like, I've been a firm believer that satire is dead.


The Guido Fawkes team. From left: sketch writer Simon Carr; news editor Harry Cole; new recruit Alex Wickham; and blog founder Paul Staines. "We were going for 'obnoxious Ron Burgundy'," Wickham says of the team vibe for this shot.
Fellow on the right looks familiar...

Zephro
Nov 23, 2000

I suppose I could part with one and still be feared...
I went to work in walking boots today and didn't even change them when I got to the office :ssj:

Firos
Apr 30, 2007

Staying abreast of the latest developments in jam communism



I walked to the gym in shorts. This was a mistake.

Guavanaut
Nov 27, 2009

Looking At Them Tittys
1969 - 1998



Toilet Rascal

TACD posted:

Fellow on the right looks familiar...
The guy on the right is Evil Tom Watson.

Borrovan
Aug 15, 2013

IT IS ME.
🧑‍💼
I AM THERESA MAY


In a shock twist of fate, the guy on the left is actually slightly less evil & incompetent than the real David Davis

Guavanaut
Nov 27, 2009

Looking At Them Tittys
1969 - 1998



Toilet Rascal
Only slightly less incompetent could still place him somewhere between a guinea pig stuck in a shoe and Chris Grayling.

Barry Foster
Dec 24, 2007

What is going wrong with that one (face is longer than it should be)

Firos posted:

I walked to the gym in shorts. This was a mistake.

Ha, me too. My knees were raw by the time I got in

Jose
Jul 24, 2007

Adrian Chiles is a broadcaster and writer

Xaerael
Aug 25, 2010

Marching Powder is objectively the worst poster known. He also needs to learn how a keyboard works.

Cowboy builders slap-dashing a GFCH boiler fitting IMO.

Total Meatlove
Jan 28, 2007

:japan:
Rangers died, shoujo Hitler cried ;_;

Irony Be My Shield posted:

The biggest problem with Mash Report for me was how hard they overlaboured a lot of the jokes. Like in the headlines section you'd often have a 'newsreader' deliver a joke then cut to a 'reporter' who'd just make the same joke again twice and more slowly. I really liked Parris' section though.

How can you be a news based satire and not satirise the news?

Looke
Aug 2, 2013

Jose posted:

Looke is a oval office I agree

lmao

Guavanaut
Nov 27, 2009

Looking At Them Tittys
1969 - 1998



Toilet Rascal

Xaerael posted:

Cowboy builders slap-dashing a GFCH boiler fitting IMO.
Or a big commercial refrigeration unit. They can fail in some exciting ways.

Looke
Aug 2, 2013

i for one am glad the one show have a whole hour dedicated to the snow

Biggus Dickus
May 18, 2005

Roadies know where to focus the spotlight.

Barry Foster posted:

Ha, me too. My knees were raw by the time I got in
I walked 6ft to the outside bin in a tshirt and jeans. This was also a mistake.

That wind is savage.

Lord Ludikrous
Jun 7, 2008

Enjoy your tea...

Xaerael posted:

Went outside in Sheffield snow report:

People who can't drive in snow need to stop loving driving in snow. Especially in a city that's pretty much 100% steep hills.
Multiple ditched cars.
Two collisions.
One total clusterfuck pileup.
Acrid stench of dead clutches everywhere. (Buy your Kwik-Fit shares now!)
Lots of grinning, giggling Children being dragged around on sleds by tired looking parents.

My Kent to Essex commute mostly went ok until the final hurdle when it turned into a terrifying hell commute where it took everything I had to keep my car from going sideways. At one point I had a queue of traffic behind me as I idled up the road at about 2mph for about two minutes because my wheels were spinning like mad and any extra power just spun them more.

Might be defeated tomorrow though, I have a very steep ramp practically at a right angle to climb to access my road from the block car park, and it’s basically sheet ice already.

Julio Cruz
May 19, 2006
I drove from Coventry to London and it was absolutely fine, roads clear and no ice anywhere. The only problem was my screenwash froze over so I couldn't clear the windscreen.

jabby
Oct 27, 2010

It must be so maddening being the EU and seeing the UK government rage about something they explicitly agreed to only a few months ago.

Not Operator
Jan 1, 2009

Not A doctor, THE Doctor!

Julio Cruz posted:

I drove from Coventry to London and it was absolutely fine, roads clear and no ice anywhere. The only problem was my screenwash froze over so I couldn't clear the windscreen.

I'm sending this post to the police.Enjoy your fine, criminal.

Tijuana Bibliophile
Dec 30, 2008

Scratchmo

jabby posted:

It must be so maddening being the EU and seeing the UK government rage about something they explicitly agreed to only a few months ago.

Among the many other stupid things about brexit, it annoys me that the tories believe that the ~magic friction-free silicone lube border~ is a great solution for a previously contested land border, but would represent an absolute collapse of the UK sovereignty if moved to the loving coast instead

Zephro
Nov 23, 2000

I suppose I could part with one and still be feared...
A Pro Read

quote:

What are they after?
William Davies writes about the Tory Brexiteers
When historians examine Britain’s departure from the European Union, one of the things that will puzzle them is the behaviour of the Conservative Party. Thanks to copious demographic and geographical analysis, we are already in a position to make sense of the referendum result itself. But it remains difficult to grasp how the Tories could effectively have taken what was to everyone else a fringe issue and used it to attack the interests they had until very recently represented: the City of London, big business, the Union, even Whitehall.

To paraphrase Neil Kinnock, how did we end up in the grotesque chaos of a Conservative government – a Conservative government – setting about the seemingly deliberate demolition of the United Kingdom and its economy? From a Tory perspective, things must have reached a sorry pass when the sole voice speaking up for the Union belongs to Arlene Foster. However much energy the Leave campaign put into stirring up nationalist and anti-immigration sentiment, it is hard to see the Westminster Brexiteers as nationalists when they show so little regard for the integrity of the UK or its governing institutions. If the economic forecasts are remotely accurate, Brexit will render England, let alone the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, a hoax nation. The most regionally imbalanced nation in Europe will become even more so, as the North suffers yet further decline while the South-East holds on. Much of South Wales and Northern Ireland will exist in a parallel economic universe to London.

What do they want, these Brexiteers? The fantasies of hardliners such as Liam Fox, Daniel Hannan and Jacob Rees-Mogg are based on dimly learned lessons from British history. The mantra of ‘Global Britain’ resurrects an ideal of laissez-faire from the era of Manchester cotton mills and New World slavery. Discussing the range of Brexit options at a Tory Conference fringe event in October, the former Brexit minister David Jones concluded: ‘If necessary, as Churchill once said, very well then, alone.’ This is the sort of nostalgia Stuart Hall warned against as early as the 1970s, and which Peter Ammon, the outgoing German ambassador in London, identified recently when he complained that Britain was investing in a vision of national isolation that Churchill had played up (and vastly exaggerated) in his wartime rhetoric.

Do they even believe the myth, or is it an expedient way of bashing opponents while pursuing some ulterior goal? Historical re-enactment may be fine for the Daily Mail and the grassroots, but it doesn’t seem a strong enough motivation to support a professional political career. We need to know not just what kind of past the Brexiteers imagine, but what kind of future they are after. One disconcerting possibility is that figures such as Fox and Rees-Mogg might be willing to believe the dismal economic forecasts, but look on them as an attraction.

This isn’t as implausible as it may sound. Since the 1960s, conservatism has been defined partly by a greater willingness to inflict harm, especially in the English-speaking world. The logic is that the augmentation of the postwar welfare state by the moral pluralism of the 1960s produced an acute problem of ‘moral hazard’, whereby benign policies ended up being taken for granted and abused. Once people believe things can be had for free and take pleasure in abundance, there is a risk of idleness and hedonism. In the United States, this fear was expressed in the cultural conservatism of the Nixon era, during which moral opprobrium was visited on welfare claimants and feckless liberals. The focus was on race and gender: in the conservative imaginary, compassion would be exploited in the economic realm by black women, and in the judicial realm by black men. In Britain, there was more emphasis on the language of economics, specifically the ‘supply side’ idea that the interests of investors and entrepreneurs were paramount. As the theory behind Thatcherism had it, government services shrink everybody’s incentives to produce, compete and invest. They reduce the motivation for businesses to deliver services, and ordinary people’s desire to work. Toughness, even pain, performs an important moral and psychological function in pushing people to come up with solutions.

This style of thinking drove Thatcher through the vicious recession of the early 1980s. It was encapsulated by Norman Tebbit in his conference speech in 1981, often misquoted: ‘I grew up in the 1930s with an unemployed father. He didn’t riot. He got on his bike and looked for work, and he kept looking till he found it.’ That would imply that economic hardship should produce a more mobile population, and perhaps further abandonment of deindustrialised regions. A more interventionist version of such thinking appeared with the development of ‘workfare’ programmes by the Clinton and Blair governments of the 1990s, which sought to repurpose the welfare state as a means of boosting claimants’ ‘employability’ as well as their efforts to find work. Under workfare schemes, benefits were either paid to those already in work in the form of ‘tax credits’, or made conditional on enrolment in training programmes and constant job-hunting. The old British idea of the ‘dole’ (or in America of ‘welfare’), as something that was an alternative to work, was quickly eradicated. And there was a new iteration under David Cameron and George Osborne, in the form of austerity. The hypothesis of ‘expansionary fiscal contraction’, touted by Osbornites during the first years of the coalition government, is that cuts to public spending can lead to economic growth, by creating more opportunities for the private sector to invest. As most economists predicted, the hypothesis turned out to be false, but thanks partly to the workfare policies left behind by New Labour, levels of unemployment under austerity didn’t reach those of the Thatcher recession, and Theresa May’s government now boasts the lowest unemployment rate since the mid-1970s. An alternative perspective on that achievement is that hardship has forced people into worse jobs, demanding fewer skills and lower capital investment, so that Britain’s productivity growth has stalled to a degree not seen since the Industrial Revolution. That is what happens when work is framed as a moral duty, to be engaged in at all costs.

UNLOCK THE LRB SITE FOR 24 HOURS. ...and enjoy 24 hours of free access to the entire LRB archive. Email address:
Enter your email address
Register Now
The fear of ‘moral hazard’ produces a punitive approach to debtors, be they households, firms or national governments, the assumption being that anything short of harshness will produce a downward spiral of generosity, forgiveness and free-riding, eventually making the market economy unviable. Osborne liked to claim (against all the evidence coming from the bond markets) that if Britain kept borrowing, lenders would lose trust in the moral rectitude of the government and interest rates would rise. Gratification must be resisted. Pain works. Only pain forces people to adapt and innovate. In practice that may mean all sorts of things: migrating, reskilling, sacrificing weekends or family time, selling property, the ‘gig economy’ and so on. The productiveness of pain is a central conservative belief, whose expression might be economic, but whose logic is deeply moralistic.

There seems little doubt that for many of Thatcher’s followers the free-market experiment hasn’t gone far enough. As long as there is an NHS, a welfare state and a public sector that is more European than American in scale, we will never truly discover what the British people are made of, because they will never be forced to find out. Steve Bannon, the former Trump strategist, has often voiced the opinion that America’s only hope of moral cleansing lies in war. Tory Brexiteers tend not to go that far, but they may well be holding out for a milder version of the same idea, an extreme of economic hardship that means government is no longer capable of picking up the pieces. No wonder families in County Durham or the Welsh Valleys have experienced multiple generations of unemployment, they argue: there’s been adequate unemployment benefit. The estimated £80 billion hit to the public finances caused by Brexit might change that. And that’s before we take up the suggestive comment lurking in the official forecasts that ‘leaving the European Union could provide the UK with an opportunity to regulate differently across social, environmental, energy, consumer and product standards.’

The optimistic version of this story is that it’s only when the chips are down we discover what people are truly capable of. Brexit might reveal reserves of courage and innovation that have lain dormant for decades, held back by the interferences of bureaucracy and public spending. And if it doesn’t? Well, then the truth is laid bare. Perhaps that will be the moment for a more heroic form of political leadership to rise from the ashes. Several prominent Tory Brexiteers, including Iain Duncan-Smith and Steve Baker, have military backgrounds. As with the Second World War, Brexit will perform an X-ray of our collective moral fibre. Remainers love facts, but are afraid of the truth.

This is, I suspect, as close to a Conservative ideology of Brexit as exists. At the very least, it has some internal coherence, whatever it may lack in detail regarding the future. But we shouldn’t exaggerate the coherence of Tory Brexit. The situation is a mess, one aspect of which is the frightening lack of responsibility displayed by its main instigators. The political weather in Westminster has been made over the past two years by Boris Johnson, a man whose only apparent goal is to make the political weather. Senior Leave campaigners, such as Dominic Cummings, admit they would have lost the referendum had he not leapt on board. Johnson approaches public life as a game in which he commits sackable offences as a way of demonstrating his unsackability. The office of foreign secretary in this administration is treated as a leash to constrain someone who would otherwise cause more trouble to the prime minister elsewhere.

Johnson is as close as British politics has to a Trump problem, and his seniority suggests that Trumpism has permeated our political culture more deeply than we like to admit. Trump may be a more acute case, but both men compel all around them to react to their idle remarks, mistakes and fantasies. On the day President Macron visited Britain, to take just one recent example, Johnson declared that he wanted to build a bridge across the Channel, and that became the headline. Trump and Johnson are ‘real-time’ politicians: they dominate the rolling news cycle, and devalue the painstaking aspect of politics in the process. Psychologically, they are inverses: Trump has no sense of humour, where Johnson sees the funny side of everything. Johnson is said to strut around Whitehall asking civil servants if they’ve found his £350 million a week yet: ‘I know it exists because it was written on my bus.’ Ha ha. After his vacuous Valentine’s Day speech on Brexit, most pundits agreed he had overplayed his hand, but that’s always been part of his brand. No doubt men such as Johnson and Trump have always existed, but healthy political systems have ways of keeping them away from the highest echelons of power.

For all his idiosyncrasies, Johnson typifies something about contemporary conservatism, which might best be understood biographically. The cultural forces shaping the new conservatism resolve in a particular stereotype: men born between the mid-1960s and the early 1970s, with some constellation of expat backgrounds, famous fathers and first careers in the media. All four things apply to Johnson, but a Venn diagram of these various characteristics would also include Michael Gove, Douglas Carswell, Daniel Hannan and Jacob Rees-Mogg. The result of these disparate characteristics is a comfortable familiarity with the myths and rituals of the British state, but a blasé indifference to the impact of policy. As Ian Jack pointed out in these pages last year (15 June 2017), the expat perspective seems to play an important role in the psychology of Brexit. Hannan and Carswell both had expatriate childhoods. Astute observers, such as the writer Gary Younge, have argued that Brexit rests more on an imperial imaginary than on a national one. But as much as anything the expat is in a position to see ‘Great Britain’ from a perspective other than that of government. Such things as statistics, macroeconomics and policy itself fade into insignificance compared to the way the nation is seen from afar, alongside its historical rivals. Ignore ‘official Treasury forecasts’ and focus on the atlas instead.

UNLOCK THE LRB SITE FOR 24 HOURS. ...and enjoy 24 hours of free access to the entire LRB archive. Email address:
Enter your email address
Register Now
In contrast to the populist message of Ukip, which is all about British blood, British soil and how the elites have betrayed them, Tory Brexitism can have a strange flippancy about it. In some cases, you wonder if they really mean it or if it’s just another attention-seeking strategy. Like Johnson, Rees-Mogg was treated as a joke until suddenly he was being discussed as a potential Conservative leader. Then there are their allies who write in the Spectator and specialise in exploring the sliver of political space between irony and bigotry. Among them is Toby Young, who originally found fame as the butt of his own joke with his memoir How to Lose Friends and Alienate People (2001). The game is a quest for attention, and humorous transgression is the key skill in winning it. Another name for it is ‘trolling’.

Armchair psychoanalysts can muse on what responsibility the high-profile fathers of these men have for cultivating their sons’ delinquency and need for attention. It is surely a safer psychological force confined to op-ed pages than unleashed on politics, especially where historic constitutional reform is at stake. But the boundary separating the conservative press from the Conservative Party has in any case been slowly dissolving, with the Times (Gove’s former employer, which currently boasts two Conservative peers, Lords Finkelstein and Ridley, on its comment team) occupying a particularly porous position on the border between the two. In January, Young came within a Twitter-storm of being appointed to the new Office for Students, which will regulate universities in England and Wales. The reality is that in addition to the ideological and cultural forces behind Brexit, it is also happening thanks to the recklessness of individuals who see public life as an opportunity to show off. This is the more fundamental sense in which Westminster is being permeated by Trumpism.

These men’s contemporaries on the centre-left had the existential fortune of beginning their careers in tandem with Blairism. The likes of Ed Balls, David Miliband and Andy Burnham threw themselves into the details of policy design and implementation, with a level of technocratic commitment that would eventually provoke populist derision from both left and right. No doubt this clique contained some planet-sized egos too, but one thing that can be said for the New Labour generation is that they saw politics as a serious business, requiring hard, serious work. Among Tory Brexiteers, by contrast, ignorance and a lack of effort is taken almost as a mark of distinction – how else to explain David Davis? Having spent so long witnessing the Blairite policy machine churn out evidence and evaluations, year after year, with impeccable economic logic, it’s as if they have abandoned such dull, humourless pursuits altogether. Hence their disdain for the Treasury and for the man, ‘Spreadsheet Phil’ Hammond, who runs it.

*

In his book Propaganda, published in 1928, Edward Bernays, the creator of modern public relations (and Sigmund Freud’s nephew), expressed his optimism that expert communication strategies could protect democracy from the psychological excesses of mass society (it is sometimes forgotten that Bernays saw ‘propaganda’ as a positive and civilising force). Modern democracy would have to draw on the most advanced techniques of communication and persuasion, just as modern business had done with advertising, if the masses were to be satisfied with the policies and leaders that were available.

Bernays believed that politicians struggle to understand the importance of communication strategy, because they never have to struggle hard enough to win public attention. Unlike businesses, which have to work hard to attract publicity, political parties and politicians get attention from the media regardless of how well thought-out their message is. Bernays believed there was a risk that mass democracies would come undone unless politicians gave more thought to how they presented themselves in the media. Recent history suggests that he was worrying about the wrong thing. The professionalisation of politics and the rise of spin led to the opposite problem: politicians began to think too carefully about how they presented themselves in the media. The image management of the Blair and Clinton era smacked of inauthenticity, a charge that was later levelled at mainstream political parties in general, leading to the populist upheavals of the past few years.

But there is a further risk lurking in Bernays’s analysis, which he seemingly didn’t anticipate. If professional politicians have an unearned advantage over others when it comes to attracting public attention, there is a danger that politics comes to attract people who only want public attention – such as Johnson – and others who only know how to exploit it, such as Rees-Mogg. While Rees-Mogg may be a firm believer in the Victorian moral vision of Brexit, there can be no denying that his currently elevated status is largely down to the fact that he is recognisable and provides good media ‘content’. When the media report his latest comments, it’s because he is someone whom everyone recognises from the media. Everything he says or does must be calculated to ensure that this remains the case. As any troll understands, wit and disruption are the best tactics for succeeding in the ‘attention economy’.

UNLOCK THE LRB SITE FOR 24 HOURS. ...and enjoy 24 hours of free access to the entire LRB archive. Email address:
Enter your email address
Register Now
It would be almost reassuring to know that there was an ideology of Tory Brexit that was driving things, just as there is an ideology known as ‘Lexit’ which views the EU as an anti-democratic neoliberal institution that must be resisted. But for the generation who entered public life in the 1990s, after the ‘end of ideology’, there were only two choices: to devote oneself with immense earnestness to the nitty-gritty of policy and economics, or to revel in the freedom of symbolism and storytelling, as journalists, PR professionals and pranksters. Political careers came later. Britain’s misfortune is that matters of the greatest seriousness are now in the hands of basically unserious people
Y'all should read the pro read

Junior G-man
Sep 15, 2004

Wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma


That is a pro of reads and thank you for putting it up.

Gonzo McFee
Jun 19, 2010
https://twitter.com/trussliz/status/968909130789478404

Tories coming out hard against having pets.

Adbot
ADBOT LOVES YOU

OwlFancier
Aug 22, 2013

El Gato is a good kitty who should have freedom imo.

  • Locked thread