Philosophers
have spent centuries debating the nature of reality without ever coming to a single
clear definition of what it is. All we
do know is that, whatever it is, our understanding of it is mediated by our
five senses and then reconstructed in our own individual brains. That means that we all have our own personal understanding
of what reality is; and in common parlance, ‘delusional’ is simply a short-hand
way of describing someone whose understanding of the objective reality around
him or her is at some distance from the understanding of the rest of us. There is another, much simpler, explanation
of reality which I once saw written on the wall of the gents in a public house –
‘reality is an illusion caused by lack of alcohol’.
Whatever
the cause, it is increasingly clear that the Prime Minister’s understanding of
the reality surrounding her is significantly at odds with the understanding of
most other people. In her case, I’m not
at all certain that plying her with a few glasses of her favourite tipple –
even if distilled
here in Wales – would do anything to resolve the problem. Alcohol is generally more likely to render
the coherent incoherent than to correct any pre-existing incoherence, although
I’d have to accept that it doesn’t always seem that way to the individual
partaking. The possibility that she is,
in fact, more or less permanently inebriated cannot be entirely discounted – it’s
not without precedent
– but it seems unlikely to me.
Her
sensory malfunctions appear to be at the extreme end of the range. When anyone says ‘no’, her brain processes
that as a ‘yes’, and if they say ‘maybe’ she hears ‘definitely’. Throwing away a narrow parliamentary majority
was a massive success which gave her unrestricted power to govern as she sees
fit, and a lost vote in parliament is merely an illusion which can be ignored. And the UK is absolutely full of electors who
genuinely believe that she is on their side,
supporting their unanimous wishes against the evil intentions of the parliament
that those same citizens so foolishly elected.
Part of the Brexit legislation is about giving the government so-called ‘Henry
VIII powers’, but her comments about parliament on Wednesday sounded rather
more like the words
of an earlier predecessor, Henry II. ‘Turbulent’
parliamentarians have some historical justification for being wary of any ruler
who sees his or her power as absolute, as do ‘turbulent’ Speakers
of the House of Commons.
Another
aspect of her serious problems in interpreting events in the world around her
is an inability to comprehend or process the words of those calling
for
her
to
go. It’s impossible to know how these messages
are being processed, but it would be no surprise if they were being interpreted
as a vote of confidence. And she
seriously believed that walking into a meeting with 27 other European leaders
with nothing new to say, no guarantee that the House of Commons could be
persuaded to back her deal, and no plan for what happens if they didn’t was
going to win her the support she requested.
There is no hope of any progress whilst she remains in charge; the only
real question now is how long that will be.
2 comments:
I wonder what the implications of all this BREXIT messing about will be for any future 'independence' referendums?
For sure a 48% - 52% result either way could never be accepted as a true indication for any real preference. Maybe the bar needs to be set as high as 75% from now on.
Sure won't please the Scottish or Welsh nationalists.
I think this comment and discussion of it would have been more appropriate under Wednesday's post, so I'll be very brief here. I agree with you that there's a problem in using a simple majority to decide such an important question (and will come back to that in a future post), but simply increasing the size of the majority required doesn't resolve the issue. Let me just reframe your question a little bit to illustrate - faced with a choice of 'status quo' or 'independence', what if neither get the sort of majority you talk about? It's no more satisfactory in terms of 'democracy' for the status quo to receive only a 52-48 endorsement than it is for the proposed alternative to receive only a 52-48 endorsement. Why should the status quo have any more legitimacy than the proposed alternative if neither enjoy clear consent of the people as a whole? The 'will of the people' and the rights of the minority are far more complex issues than many seem to assume.
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