Friday 17 August 2018

On The Preservation of Democracy

Some say the natural state of humanity – that is, what would arise if we swept away all convention tomorrow – is a form of Utopian democracy, or an accidental anarcho-syndicalism. No-one has yet produced the daguerrotype of this primeval Arcadia, nor accounted for the universal experience of untamed man - “voracious and sanguinary”, as Kirk put it. But let us say, regardless of that, that we desire something like modern democracy, but more equal, more fair. Construct it on what model you want, Parliamentary or Swiss or Federal – in all cases, an even cursory consideration should tell us that we cannot accomplish this via revolution, via a sweeping away of conventions. In fact, any hope of an equitable society rests precisely upon convention, of long civic training, of the restraint of our own appetites.

The popular revolution does indeed return us to the state of primeval humanity, insomuch as it returns us to reliance upon strongmen. There must be one to first wave the flag at Lemarque's funeral, or rouse the mutineers on the Potemkin. The National Convention needs Robespierre for a President, and the Party needs Stalin for its General Secretary. High ideals descend to the imprisonment and murder of the Dauphin. These popular revolutions, of course, need not be strictly “left-wing”; Jacobo Arbenz and Salvador Allende were overthrown, at the instruction of imperial masters, but nonetheless by broadly popular militarism. Nor need they even be politically violent, if the revolution be not total, or directly against the constitution of the land. Thatcherism had a truly Jacobin ardour, supported at 4 consecutive elections by the body of the people.

Democracy, then, is not a primal quality, but a civilised one. It requires long training. Nor is democracy so simple – even in the dreams of Rousseau – as the blunt mass vote. That is ochlocracy, mob rule, not democracy, the rule of the people. We may observe with irony the terrified response to the vote by the United Kingdom to leave the European Union, or the election of Donald Trump, that the educated despisers of convention have exhibited. They seem now to understand the branch they are sitting upon has been cut off, but know not by whom, even as they wave the saw around in emphasis.

What training does democracy require? Well, let us first consider the training any human being must have to live alongside others, from birth to adulthood: the ability to share, to give way to the needs of others, to respect that which is others' (“no snatching!”), the ability to restrain one's own appetites. How is it, if the body politic is ideally consisted of such civilised people, do we not expect the body politic itself to be the same? We are social creatures, not beings of pure mind; the bulk of our species, ourselves included, are irrational the bulk of the time, relying upon training and instinct to carry us through. The adult who has not received the training we mention is impossible to live alongside. They spoil what they touch, they damage even those they love. It is the same with an untrained social body. Of course the baser appetites are provided for in such a case; of course minorities (be they darlings of the left or of the right) are oppressed by the untrammelled course of larger groups.

Yet, factionally, full of cant, insincerely, we demand rights for ourselves, for our favoured groups, and claim that the opposition is trampling upon human decency or natural rights or democracy or whatever phrase we choose to warp and abuse today. Of course, we only want the appetites of our faction to be satisfied; when we talk of “rights”, we really mean the civic possessions we desire power over. We in fact have reverted to the politics of strength, even as we plead that we are the true defenders of democracy.

Democracy means the opposite of all this. By trusting more and more citizens with a direct share in how we are governed (a lack of suffrage never meant there was no share at all), we impose greater duties and responsibilities upon more and more citizens. Extending the suffrage did not mean making more people more “free”; it meant giving more people the terrible responsibility of wielding the headman's axe. When you cannot vote, you may reasonably expect those with power to exercise noblesse oblige, and legislate to protect you; children can expect that of their parents. But when you can vote, the weight of the decisions made by any government you support rests square upon your shoulders. You are not in a position to see democracy as a way to extend your privileges. You are now amongst those who must restrain their own desires in the interest of the protection of the property and liberties of others.

This confounds the rapacious capitalist and the revolutionary Marxist both. Neither enclosure nor the Unlawful Oaths Act nor enforced nationalization nor enforced union dues show restraint, respect for the property of others, nor care for their liberties. Every measure taken to achieve the – perhaps good, perhaps admirable – aims of the revolution perverts the accomplishment. Thatcher wanted a property-owning democracy, an admirably Burkean aim; to accomplish it, she undertook a quite unBurkean policy, which caused massive, unforecasted, unsustainable changes to both local communities and to the nature of the property market. She achieved not a property-owning democracy, but the creation of a wealthy rentier class and the further social collapse of communities already affected by the mass privatization (and destruction) of industry. Mrs Thatcher saw, with an honest eye, the problems facing her nation; and in revolutionary fervour set to with a sledgehammer. No wonder the walls have been undermined since.

So let us say we have agreed to preserve democracy, or perhaps more honestly to restore it. If you are not of that view, honestly say so; call for Madame Guillotine's invention to return, and honestly proclaim that your private judgement on the wholesale reconstruction of nations is trustworthy, though you and I are incapable of recalibrating a grandfather clock. But if you consider our late experiment in democracy, with only a few hundred years in the testing, to be worth preservation, then certain common principles must be agreed upon, regardless of our particular faction.

The concept of promise-keeping and of self-restraint must be widely disseminated and enforced. A country based upon contract as we are – with a democracy based upon common assent and mutual trust – cannot have laws which loosely dispense with the necessities of oath-keeping, as we do in arenas ranging from public debt to the marital bed. If our children are taught to sate their appetites – social, career, sexual – at every stage, if our teenagers are encouraged to resent every prior generation (the generations who built them, by graft and bequest, the very schools and universities which disavow them) – if our adults are encouraged by both Thatcherism and Marxism to see themselves as simply the sum of their labours – then we cannot hope to live in any form of common compact. If there is no reason not to elbow one's neighbours except fear of brute strength – the opposite of even-handed justice, and an enemy of shared goals – then only demagoguery or autocracy can hope to achieve assent.

A realization of a living connection to both the past and the future is necessary also. This is not to skate over the sins of our forebears, nor yet to idly believe in the perfection of our descendants; this is neither nostalgia nor the Whig view of history. It is, instead, in one sense the simple recognition our grandfathers and our grandchildren are much the same sort of people as we – two legs, two arms, capable of that greatest love which lays down its life, capable of art and architecture to lift the soul, capable also of rape and Auschwitz and Jim Crow. It is also a recognition of a unity between us and them, represented in the nation we inherit and the nation we pass on. It means giving thanks for the trees planted in our parks by men and women otherwise quite morally indifferent; it means shepherding our urban landscapes, often beautiful, often built with blood money (yes, perhaps that church was built by a wicked industrialist – but its flying buttresses cause the soul to soar alongside, and thousands of decent folk have had their wounds treated in the pews). It means not tearing down every institution and convention before even assaying the replacement, all because of our own sense of historical isolation – we uniquely are able to assess good and evil, beauty and horror, cries the revolutionary, whether in social mores or in architecture. We owe an undespoiled landscape to our children; we do not owe them wasteful exploitation of resources, nor a litany of exterminated species. Similarly, we owe them not just fine physical buildings, but fine social institutions, too – ones improved by accretion and prudential rebuilding.

We must also replace common resentment with mutual respect, though God alone knows how. No common project of building can be accomplished by those who hate one another. Even Satan knows this – a house divided cannot stand. Now, if you desire stumbling, humbling democracy over Robespierrean purity, then you must assent to this. If that is the case, you must desire the rule of law, where law – even where imperfect, not ideal – is reckoned out equally to all. As Orwell put it, the hanging judge may be dreadful and archaic, but he is never – can never be – unjust or corrupt. The law must only make simple, clear requirements, and cannot have vague clauses requiring judicial interpretation, naturally favouring some over others. This is true whether it relates to the suspension of habeas corpus we currently have in our terror legislation, or the obscene power of corporations in international arbitration, or the stranger and more malign niches of equality legislation. So – in a healthy democracy – the richer partner cannot resent the poor man's requests, nor the poorer partner the rich man's wealth. Man and woman must live not in the midst of a revolutionary reordering, but as partners – flawed, sinning against each other – in a common endeavour to pass on a worthwhile inheritance to our children. The aged cannot resent the young for their desire, nor the young hate the old for their inherited fences and habits. Essentially, we must learn not to get our own way, and still live with the winner afterward; and, sometimes, not often, get our way and be a magnanimous, co-operative victor.

Now, if we had any sense, we would say things are too far gone. The slate will be washed clean with blood, and some slow process will, after much chaos, rebuild some new constitution. But happy features of the mindset required for the project above include mulish stubbornness, an intuitive love for what is well-worn and battle-tested, a sober acceptance of our nature, and a cheerful confidence in the value of planting the seed of a tree one will never see. On that basis, let us begin.

Tuesday 3 July 2018

Penalty Shootouts, Britannia, and Logres


So many jokes, so many sneers.

It's easy to be cynical about football. I am vastly cynical about it. I've long lost deep investment or love for football, though I follow (with stoic resignation) the travails of Aston Villa, the club I arbitrarily chose to support as a child.

C.S. Lewis contrasted the two national spirits of Britain – “Logres”, close to the land, noble, mystical; and “Britannia”, loud, blaring, brash, arrogant, superior. Football in Britain, especially England, usually tends to the latter. Whether you're playing with jumpers for goalposts or watching the Premier League, the snarling spirit of Britannia is never far. That nasty know-it-all attitude, the opposition-blaming, the lopsided and unhealthy obsession. Whilst nearly every accusation at Man Utd fans is just, that mindset is really just the undiluted concentrate of English fans.

And then we get to the footballers. Overpaid, whinging, effeminate, dive-happy. And the clubs they play for – soulless, exploitative, life-destroying businesses owned by shady businessmen. And FIFA, perhaps the worst international body in any sport, and that's a crowded field.

Football is a frankly depressing spectacle. Perhaps it always has been. That doesn't make it better.

Three lions on a shirt

For most English boys when I was growing up football is social oxygen. It's in the atmosphere. As a child, breaktime was football. After school – football. I grew up in a pretty ordinary area, no more football mad than anywhere else. Not a major club town. But that's the point – football is the most fundamentally ordinary thing (or was – I wonder how smartphones have affected that).

The basic fantasy, for most of us – good players or bad – was playing for England. In the interim, being picked for club or school teams was the aim. Every match of World Cup Singles at lunch was practise. Of course underneath the dream was a knowledge of reality – that we were never going to play at any decent standard. That didn't dull the fantasy. It heightened it. The very unobtainability of the goal added sweetness to it – it became more romantic, more dream-like. Football was real, concrete, daily, but it was also poetry and magic.

That changed, eventually. As a teenager other things became more interesting (girls). The performance pressure, the angry blares at every mistake, became exhausting. The dream died upon contact with reality – none of us were going to play for England.

Everyone seems to know the score, they've seen it all before

And England kept on losing, so why would you bother watching? There were some grim experiences. Losing to Romania during the Euro 2000 Group Stage. Not even qualifying for Euro 2008. Getting smashed by Germany in the 2nd Round in 2010. Drawing with Costa Rica in 2014. Losing to Iceland in 2016. And all those penalty shootouts.

It becomes monotonous, supporting a poor team. Especially when so much hope is put on that bad team, tournament after tournament. The English cricket team was pretty awful in the late 90s, but nobody expected much else from them (except, inexplicably, each Ashes series). English football lets its fans down again and again – if not on the field, off it, it's hard to care about the team between primadonna players and managerial scandals (if you're not sure what I mean, Google: Glenn Hoddle's views on disability, Ulrika Jonsson, the results of sacking John Terry as captain, and Sam Allardyce's son).

The magic of football is in the past for most of us, left beside jumpers on the dry park grass of our youth. Watching our national team is the definition of masochism. The 2018 World Cup doesn't change any of that.

Thirty years of hurt

The first football tournament of which I was aware was the 1994 World Cup – for which England didn't qualify. English fans broadly backed the Republic of Ireland, in a blissfully naïve manner only possible for the imperial home nation.

The next was Euro 96. That was the first tournament in which I watched England. There was a buzz about it. England were hosting – the last tournament we hosted was the 1966 World Cup. Fate was with us. The manager was good (thankfully no-one looked too much at his financial dealings beforehand). The team was better. Consider these names: Seaman, G. and P. Neville, Pearce, Ince, Campbell, Platt, Gascoigne, Shearer, Sheringham, Anderton, McManaman. There was a lot of talent in that squad.

England topped their group. A 1-1 draw in the first match vs Switzerland, Shearer's first goal of the tournament cancelled out by an 83rd minute penalty. A 2-0 win vs Scotland, with Shearer scoring again and Gazza finishing them off. And then a 4-1 thrashing of the Netherlands, with two goals each from Shearer and Sheringham.

Then a quarter-final against Spain. This wasn't a vintage Spanish team, but they held us to 0-0, even after Golden Goal extra time. We'd gone out on penalties in the 1990 World Cup semis, vs West Germany (a.k.a the old nemesis; cf 1966, 1970), after Lineker scored late to drag us to 1-1 at full-time. Stuart Pearce and Chris Waddle had missed their spotkicks, sending us out. But that was then; this was now. We breezed past the Spaniards, going through 4-2 after 4 penalties.

Then to a semi-final against Germany (fundamentally the artist formerly known as West Germany). Wednesday 26th June, 1996. 7.30 start, prime evening slot after work. The teams walk out at Wembley to a home crowd in full throat - “football's coming home, it's coming...”. 3rd minute, Gazza crosses it from a corner, Shearer – the archetypal fox – nods it in from close. 1-0. 16th minute, Germany peg us back – Kuntz scores, 1-1.

That's how it stays at full-time. Into extra time. Golden Goal rule in place, first goal wins. Shearer doesn't quite connect with a high pass into the box, but it drifts across the goal, and Gazza is running for it, skidding for it. Gazza of the tears, the man who cared so much for his team that he began to weep when booked in the '90 semi-final, knowing it would mean he would be barred from the final if England won. Gazza of the big heart, the big personality, the fragility, the oncoming tragedies.

Gazza just misses. He made a good effort, but just a feather more, and England were through to the final – vs the Czech Republic, and we could beat them. But there was no feather more. And so to penalties. We can do penalties.

And we did – the first block went 5-5. Shearer, Platt, Pearce (redemption!), Gascoigne (redemption!), Sheringham – all did their bit. Sudden Death. Each pair of penalties, if one team misses and the other scores, the match is over. An Aston Villa defender is sent forward. Sure-footed, steady player.

“Gareth Southgate, all of England is with you.”

Saved. Inevitably, Moeller scored his, and England were out.

I remember every moment. I remember the opprobrium heaped on Southgate – shifty and weedy, lost his nerve, softly side-footed it to the keeper. The only obstacle to our glorious march to a home title. The only man in the way of ending 30 years of hurt. Britannia blared in fury for – I don't remember how long, really. Til the '98 loss on penalties to Argentina, I suppose. And his name would come up every Penalties disaster thereafter. Gareth Southgate 96, David Batty 98, Darius Vassell 04, Jamie Carragher 06, Ashley Cole 12. The list doesn't start with Waddle 90, though he's bonus trivia on it. It starts with weedy, shifty Gareth Southgate.

Gareth Southgate is manager of the England football team at the 2018 World Cup.

Never stopped me dreaming

England go to Russia – who shouldn't be hosting, and whose team is on the outskirts of a growing national doping scandal, but who end up, it must be admitted, playing with heart – amidst low expectations. No-one believes England can do it, and the grim monotony of the McLaren-Capello-Hodgson era, the obviously mercenary nature of the Premier League, the pall of wider political anxiety...they combine to kill the interest of many. And England are managed by weedy, shifty, waistcoat-wearing Gareth Southgate. I don't think I saw a England flag hoisted before the first match. Surely there were some, but in the midst of the heatwave, with news of troubles abroad and trouble at home, they were few and far between.

First match, England beat Tunisia 2-1. Two goals from Kane, the second a last-minute winner We played like we wanted to win. We looked like we might have won by more. The effect is electric – I see a flag of St George in a window for the first time after this. Waistcoat sales rise. Gareth Southgate looks less weedy and shifty – more calm, more decent, more steady. Something England needs.

Second match, England beat Panama 6-1. Panama are naff and violent, but the sheer panache England show is rather alarming. We had looked good against Tunisia, but this is something else. Two from Stones, three from Kane, one from Lingard. We're through to the 2nd Round. Of course, this doesn't prove much – we've finished off two small teams. That's all. But you can hear the...not whispers. You can hear the thoughts of the English football fan. “Maybe this time...”

We rest most of our team vs Belgium; they do the same. We lose 1-0. There are grumbles about being so unambitious, but people are coming in behind Southgate, Kane, and the gang. This is strategic. This is wise. Despite the defeat, a few fanatics are starting to demonstrate the English football insanity: “We can do it”.

2nd round vs Colombia. Colombia are dirty like Panama, but much better. Their main man is missing, however, and for 65 minutes England are in charge, for all the fouling. England are singing, which is a good sign, though “God save the Queen”, which is an odd choice. In the 57th minute, Kane scores a penalty. I say to a friend: “I think we've got this”. I say to my wife: “I would rather it was 2-0”. 5 minutes of stoppage time are added at the end – making up for endless Colombian time-wasting and transgressions.

Colombia score in the 93rd minute. The script is complete. Extra time passes without a goal, inevitably. Penalties. And Gareth Southgate is the manager.

I know the result already, but somehow I can't stop following the match. I thought I got this out of my system when David Batty broke my heart in '98, but penalty shootouts have mythic power for me, like for so many Englishmen. When you don't have tales of glory, you might as well have tales of woe.

Colombia slot in their first three penalties. We score our first two – Kane, Rashford. Then Jordan Henderson misses. Jordan Henderson, 2018. Add him to the list. The list that starts with Gareth Southgate.

Then Colombia slip up. They forget the script. Uribe hits the bar. Trippier puts the next away for England, redeeming his defensive error that led to the equalizer earlier. Last Colombian penalty. Bacca steps up, gives it a right smack...and it's SAVED. Jordan Pickford, criticized for being short, reaches across and pushes it away.

England can set it right, though. Eric Dier can miss. It can be Eric Dier, not Jordan Henderson, who joins the list that starts with Gareth Southgate.

Eric Dier – 1 of 5 Spurs players in the team, along with the talismanic captain Kane – does not miss.

England win their first World Cup penalty shootout. Their first in any format since that match vs Spain at Euro 96.

Gary Lineker tweets that he's crying.

All the magic floods back, unasked for. The sun is shining and my green school jumper is marking a goalpost. Silent poetry buzzes in the air, behind every fan on the news singing - “it's coming home!” (the Queen has, for now, been adequately saved). It brings to mind the 2nd Test at Edgbaston in 2005, in the greatest cricket series of all time – Kasprowicz ct +Jones b Harmison, England win by 2 runs. A moment where sport – frivolous games played by overpaid primadonnas – transcends its gross material nature and becomes dream. A moment where blaring Britannia is in full force, but suddenly, unexpectedly joined by misty, mythic Logres. Bobby Moore tackling Jairzinho. Headingly '81. Hurst's hat-trick. Wilkinson's drop kick against the Aussies in Sydney. These are crystal memories which are no longer about the match, the man, the historic context – they're true at the level of Gawain and the Green Knight now. They are legends of this island people, immutable amidst disappointment, whether sporting or political, talismanic in the face of the next jousting contest.

Southgate is humble in the post-match interview. The English interviewer, in a Britannian tone, exclaims: “...and they say penalty shootouts are hard for England!” Southgate replies quietly: “They are.” The interviewer tries to draw him on England's chances: “The field has opened up, hasn't it?” Humble, restrained Gareth Southgate focusses on England's previous struggles against Sweden, our next opponent. He doesn't mention that the final will likely be against Brazil or France, neither of whom we have any hope at all of beating. He's thinking one match ahead. But then, quietly, with just a hint of – emotion? excitement? determination? - something, he concludes: “I don't want to go home yet”.

Gareth Southgate, all of England is with you.

I turn on the Lightning Seeds.

We still believe.

Friday 27 April 2018

26 Points on the Alfie Evans Case

Some thoughts on Alfie Evans. Don't read if the case is particularly upsetting to you (and it well might be), or if you're incapable of any sort of reasonable discussion about the topic.
SOME FACTUAL OBSERVATIONS
1. Alfie has a condition which does not seem to be, in the normal order of things, curable.
2. Alfie is apparently in no pain.
3. Alfie was given just a few minutes to live off ventilation. He has now lived several days, largely without additional oxygen (and for one 9-hour period entirely without).
4. During some periods of that period, hospital staff forcibly stopped his parents feeding or hydrating him, on the basis that nourishment was barred by the court order.
5. There is no negative implication to the public purse of him being moved to Italy.
6. His parents have not been found guilty of neglect in any way.
7. The hospital leaked its view that custody would not be returned until the doctors liked the parents more.
8. Alfie's father has announced (in his most recent, final press release) that they will be withdrawing from the public eye to work with the hospital.

SOME FORMAL OBSERVATIONS
1. It is, prima facie, reasonable for the hospital to withdraw care at the expense of the public purse when it judges it fruitless. That does not equate to the hospital having custody of the child. Rather the opposite: his parents asked for a service, which has now been withdrawn, logically putting his care back in their hands.
2. The hospital's argument, that Alfie could not long survive off ventilation (that is, he could survive only a few minutes), has been proven wrong.
3. British courts are not independent of government (though one hopes their judgements are independent of other government officials). The British judiciary is part of the British government. This is the same in all systems I know of. Therefore, Lord Justice Hayden is not some strictly neutral third party; he is an agent of government, who has gone through the same apprenticeships as other government officials. That does not mean his judgements are corrupt - but it does mean that they are not bias-free, accessing eternal truth directly.
4. If Alfie is not in pain, it is exceptionally difficult to demonstrate that keeping him alive is cruel to him. Indeed, it's something of a nonsense to claim that it is so.
5. If Alfie is not suffering, and his parents are not criminally guilty of neglect, then it is hard to see why there is a court-appointed guardian and why a court could possibly be needed to judge Alfie's best interests.
6. If Alfie is as mentally defunct as the hospital argues (and I have no reason to doubt them), then it is hard to see how a court could define his best interests. A court has no natural rights in the case, and can hardly look at Alfie's previous opinions on the matter.
7. Let us say, though, that ventilation IS somehow cruel to Alfie, and that it is in Alfie's best interests to stop it (notwithstanding the above). Surely stopping nourishment is also cruel? Or is there some other definition being used?
8. Perhaps "best interests" here relates to that numinous term "quality of life", in which case here we have the government decided that a disabled boy lacks "quality of life" and so should not only be taken off a ventilator, but forcibly starved.

9. It is not within the realms of imagination that the child of richer parents at a BUPA hospital would be facing the same court order.

SOME CONCLUSIONS
1. It is patently wicked that Alfie has been forcibly starved as part of this court-ordered euthanasia - because that's what it is. The decision involves not just the removal of care (the doctor's prerogative), not even just the seizure of custody, but actions intended to speed his death. This is evil.
2. The seizure of custody, as with Charlie Gard, is dreadful, because there is no reason under the rule of law why it should occur. Courts arbitrarily deciding that those who have committed no crime and are not mentally incapable nonetheless cannot care for their children is an incredible idea; there is no measurable standard, no repeatable written methodology.
3. That the hospital blackmailed Alfie's parents into silence is shameful.
4. The British government is far more for parental "choice" at 23 weeks in the womb than at 23 months out of it.
5. The issue of the incurability of the condition, and the related issue of us needing to deal with mortality better, are not relevant to the formal issue - of parental vs hospital custody - and people must stop equating the two.
6. The hospital has been embarrassingly wrong, and Alfie's medical team - as qualified and hard-working as they are - probably need to take stock of that, given the torture they have put his parents through (Alfie, remember, feels no pain, so is not being tortured at all - his parents are...by the state).
7. Families do not always get it right, of course, but the more decision-making is devolved - or rather, the less it is centralized - the more people are free, within the limits of a coherent and predictable body of law, to make their own mistakes. The family is obviously the most natural unit of decision for the children in it. The state may be able to get some big things right, but when they get things wrong, they get them wrong on an enormous scale. On which note...
8. One segment of my Christian acquaintance has sided vociferously with the state over this and the Gard cases, obsessed as they are with state power rectifying wrongs. No matter that this is the state that oversees the butchery of 180k children in the womb each year. This is strictly an in-house issue, but I do wonder when my fellow left-wing Christians will wake up from their comfortable but fatal delusion that the British state (including the monolith of the NHS) is essentially on the side of good. This is a terribly foolish position for them to hold.
9. This is another instance of Britain being a notably less free country than it was - in the same period of time as two people have been convicted of making offensive jokes (i.e. not a real crime) and someone else was imprisoned for swearing at a speed camera. It's inclinced to make one gloomy. However, I'm still pretty convinced Jesus is alive, so I've got something to cling on to. I hope you do, too.