Romantic visions of the past would have us believe that the British were always a deferent sort – knowing their place, doffing their caps to their olders and betters, and respecting authority. Whether this society ever existed, outside the Victorian romantic novel, the Britain of today is a very different place. By and large, respect is something that has to be earned rather than inherited and authority is questioned.
Thursday’s atrocities represent an attempt to impose authority in a terribly different way. The perpetrators aim, almost certainly, is to affect the population, changing the way we live. We don’t know whether the bombers want us to overthrow the government, to withdraw our troops from Iraq, or to cast off the freedoms of secularism, but regardless of their aims it is an attempt to impose their will on a population that needs authority to justify itself and to earn its power.
During the IRA bombing campaigns, many British people who had little interest in the Northern Ireland situation took the unionists’ side in defiance of the IRA’s demands. The terrorism had the opposite of its intended effect, damaging the nationalist cause, as people refused to be blackmailed into submission.
The killing of innocent civilians is as authoritarian as one can be, whether as the actions of a dictatorial government or of madmen hell bent on causing terror. The British people don’t like being dictated to, as the bombers are sure to discover. Whatever their cause, it will have only been harmed by Thursday’s attacks.
(See also.)
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I’ve been getting loads of hits from people searching on “Sudoku”. I’ve still not heard if I passed my regional heat of the Independent‘s Sudoku Grand Master Championship, so in the mean time here are some other bloggers who were at regional finals:
Watching the appalling news from London, the cynic in me wonders how long the Government will manage to stave off the irresistible urge to say, with no consideration of the evidence, “It wouldn’t have happened if we’d had ID cards.” Mercifully few fatalities reported so far, given the number of incidents and scale of the disruption.
Brighton station, where I was on Saturday, has been closed; Kings Cross, where I was on Sunday, has been evacuated.
The best sources for news at the moment:
Update: It looks like the death toll is going to be over forty. “Anger” and “sickness” are as close as I can come to describing how I feel at the moment. If ever there were a case for the death penalty – and there isn’t – it would be for crimes like this. Murdering civilians at random is the lowest and most cowardly crime. The police can’t track down the perpertrators soon enough.
Some thought President Chirac might like to consider next time he fancies dissing another nation’s cuisine.
- The final IOC vote was London 54, Paris 50.
- A majority of four can be lost by two votes switching.
- Had there been a tie at 52-52, Jacques Rogge, the IOC President, had a casting vote.
- Although we don’t know how he would’ve voted, his name is Jacques.
- Paris could therefore have one if two IOC members who voted for London had stuck with Paris.
- Finland has two IOC members.
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