By James Bowman on 4.24.06 @ 12:07AM
Plus ever widening gaps between intelligence and culture.
Those who want to appear prescient can start talking now about
the "Sharp Turn to the Right in Britain" that will be in the
headlines two weeks from now as a result of the large gains likely
to be made by the British National Party in the local elections on
May 4. There's no art to making such a prediction. Polls are now
showing the BNP as pulling in a quarter of the electorate, and
historically the polls tend to understate the party's level of
support. This is because some people don't like to tell pollsters
that they support an organization routinely represented as
"fascist" or a "racist." It is so represented partly because of its
opposition to immigration, which I believe to be mistaken in
principle, and partly because it really is fascist and
racist -- at least if we go by the things that some of its more
extreme supporters say. But Rachel Sylvester of the Daily
Telegraph has an advance diagnosis of the causes of this
prospective political earthquake that sounds more persuasive to me
than latent British racism:
The truth is that support for the BNP is not really a
protest vote against a racially mixed society: it is a cry of rage
about the quality of life in some of the poorest areas in the
country. There is not much cheerleading for the far Right in the
streets of Chelsea. The BNP is exploiting a growing sense of
frustration with genuine problems: the lack of affordable housing,
the increase in low-level crime, the failure of inner-city schools,
the loss of a sense of identity among white working-class men
following the collapse of traditional industries. These failures
are not really anything to do with race -- although, of course, the
more people come to live in an area, the more stretched local
resources will be -- but the BNP has diverted a general sense of
grievance into a specific feeling of unfairness based on a
perception that there is "us and them."
Of course, this isn't to say that there
isn't an us and a
them. But the "them" in this case isn't the immigrants themselves
nearly so much as it is the liberal multiculturalists in the
dominant culture who want to prevent them from assimilating.
****
One of the grievances of the poorer sorts of Britons, mentioned
above, may be the one which is most assiduously fostered by the
media, namely "the growing income gap between rich and poor," an
old chestnut trotted out by the American media even more
promiscuously than by the British. For example, on April 16 the
New York Times told us of how "Revival in Japan Brings Widening
of Economic Gap." No need to ask what "gap" that might be! "Japan's
economy," said the Times, "after more than a decade of
fitful starts, is once again growing smartly. Instead of rejoicing,
however, Japan is engaged in a nationwide bout of hand-wringing
over increasing signs that the new economy is destroying one of the
nation's most cherished accomplishments: egalitarianism." I don't
know enough about Japan to be able to say whether or not that's
true about the hand-wringing, but if it is the tender-minded
Japanese are wringing their hands over a tautology. Or so it seems
to me. The fabled gap that causes the media, at least, so much
anguish has always struck me as being an obvious and necessary
artifact of the growth that otherwise appears so desirable. Any
time an economy begins to grow, the people at the top are bound to
get the new money first -- that is before it "trickles down" (dread
words!) to those in the lower income cohorts. By the same token,
the only way to bring about greater equality of incomes is for
growth to be stagnant, as it was for over a decade in Japan. But,
as I may have had occasion to say before, I'm not an economist and
should be glad to be put right by anybody who is and who may come
to read this.
****
Of course we know that the New York Times is, in the
immortal words used to describe himself by Keith
Olbermann of MSNBC to Howard Kurtz of the Washington Post,
"currently aligned, not in the sense of having membership, but
being in the same part of the ballpark as a lot of liberals." Good
one, Keith! In that case, how I look forward to the time when that
alignment will no longer be current! The Times's presence
in the same part of the same ballpark made itself obvious again
last week with a headline which, perhaps as recently as a decade ago,
would have been inconceivable in our newspaper of record. "On His
New Album, Neil Young Calls for Bush's Impeachment." Of course,
there's not much news-value in that addition to the ever-growing
ranks of anti-war pop stars in spite of Mr. Young's once having
found it convenient to associate himself politically with Ronald
Reagan. Easy come, easy go ought to be the motto for the political
allegiances of the beautiful but largely brainless people of the
entertainment community. But what I find much, much sadder is the
Times's ever-growing attachment to the values of the
celebrity culture, in whose world alone it could possibly imagine
anyone cares what Neil Young thinks about George Bush.
****
One more straw in the wind indicating the Times's
outlook on the world came earlier this month. On the same day, the
paper published the obituaries of Fred Christensen, one of the top American
fighter aces of World War II and a recipient of the Distinguished
Flying Cross, the Silver Star and the Air Medal, and the Reverend
William Sloan Coffin, famed anti-war protester
and agitator of the Vietnam era. Which of these distinguished
gentlemen do you imagine the Times regarded as having
lived a life more deserving of notice and recognition by the
American people? Judging by the relative length of their obituaries
-- 534 words for Captain Christensen and 2,939 words for the
Reverend Mr. Coffin -- the latter ought to be seen as having been,
in the Times's eyes, nearly six times more important than
the former. No surprises there, then.
topics:
Immigration