Friday, 11 November 2011

Poppy

I haven’t slept, which tends to distort emotions and things get taken out of context. Still it was necessary, after staying up later and later distracted with this and that, to reset my internal clock. I’ve done it several times now. It’s not a problem, except for that strange sense of approaching morning from the wrong side, as if time is upside down. It makes one uneasy. Gaining insight is the key, I see it. I’m trying to very deliberately reject emotion, to deconstruct it, if truth be told; because for me most of my emotions, insomnia related or not, are largely baseless and self destructive. It’s not a piteous thing. I have an inner horizon which I couldn’t live without. But as an inward looking fellow my enemy is inertia - and this is usually born of a lukewarm concoction of fear, disgust, anger and often guilt. Base emotions, shameful ones. It’s hard to explain. Also my perception of time is unusual. Time for me has always been distorted, irrelevant, counter-factual. I’ve never felt as old as I am; always an old man in a young man’s skin or vice versa, a naive man ungrateful for experience. I need to feel time passing in a recognisable way, not the numbers on the clock or a weird sounding cycle of days which repeats endlessly. Isn’t it funny how we usually measure time? I feel I could put my hand out and watch a spider string its web from it before I made even one motion to make my life better. If we’re eternal beings and time is, ultimately, infinite then I’ll be alright. I’ll be inclined to be at ease with that, I think. If not then I don’t belong here, and I need to change how my machine operates or get off the bus.


11am. Armistice day. I’m giving my own private moment of contemplation, whether that’s a good thing for me, personally, or not. I’ve always had a curious reverence for it - the silence, the ceremonious interruption of life. I’ve had friction with a couple of employers who were either slow to observe it or who were the focus of a convenient expression of discontent: the larger issue being that something is wrong with the world (and so forth), the pace of life being absurd, my egotistical outlook on a culture which is no longer fully awake to history as I of course am. I become conscious of a kind of moral vanity. I try to cleans myself because it no longer seems appropriate.


A man’s politics change. Death is permanent. My moral approbations are often, I know, vile. Even pornographic. I must stop crutching on absolutes, on hyperbole. It’s juvenile. I’m drawn to bold, arch metaphors, you can read it in my scribbling, the things I say. Hence I become necessarily wary of labouring the macabre or the horrific - images of the faces of the dead, reaching hands and the like - because its impolite. It’s naive.


But thinking of death, on a day of remembrance, I want to stop and stand; in the path of my life. (As if I haven’t been doing that for long enough already! In a different way maybe, for a different end.) I’ve been on a journey, as we all are as we grow up, of trying not to think about history like a fairytale. Of course I have to admit that in so far as the past can be known a story weaves itself naturally, and indeed facts arranged in a sequence infer cause and effect; the agency of man; good and evil. Hence I don’t want to get to thinking about the injustice of war. Its not a useful thing at the beginning. I think the pertinent fact about the Great War, about which I know very little, is that young men, a good deal younger than me now, died in their millions and every one was a private, intimate tragedy and a story of their own, cut short.

Any rhetoric beyond that and I’m taking a step back. Anything beyond that simple fact is a candidate for scepticism - the meagre fact that in the 20th Century young men were butchered on an industrial scale. What I mean is the corruption of remembrance into something else; more akin to ancestor worship or hero worship; very solemn and dignified, yes, and perhaps comforting to some, but primitive also. Natural, yes, but morally questionable: not perfect. You might see it as very benign, I don’t know. But I don’t think it’s any disrespect to the fallen to refrain from using words for “bravery” and words for “sacrifice” when we’re talking about the loss of life. Especially loss of life on such an unimaginable scale. Indeed I’m sure men and women in war are often brave and the sacrifice they make can be meaningful, but lets divorce the two things - the virtue and the tragedy. The facts, the facts of the war dead, speak for themselves I think. I don’t want to get on a soap box but one way to look at the first world war is that it was just a stupid, stupid folly perpetrated on humankind by Queen Victoria’s grand-kids who were jealous of each other’s toys. That being said you might agree that the second world war was indisputably about ideology and freedom, or that both of the wars were to a greater or lesser extent about defending our homes against aggression; but how far can you take that? Are all wars not justified in these terms? Where does that sense of righteousness belong and does it belong on remembrance day necessarily? To consider it a different way is it ever wise to set aside reason and scepticism about history on a day of remembrance?


I think the way the nation celebrates armistice day can sometimes be quietly jingoistic and nationalistic; though I emphasise it’s born out of noble enough intentions. I see a small problem with commemorating the war dead of WW1, in particular, by men and women in uniform marching to and fro, firing salutes, as somehow inappropriate. Professional soldiers, royalty, pageantry - all this ceremony to honour millions of conscripts who would have gone to a firing squad if they tried to desert? You’ll see some 17 year old boy on a wall of a church commemorated as “Private John Smith" and I can’t help but think that he was only “Private John Smith” at the very end of his life. Before that, who knows what he was? Who knows what he would have been? Indeed putting on that uniform, whether it was out of bravery or through propaganda and deception, was what killed him. I want to know what he’d say if we could somehow wake him up and ask him how he felt about becoming a soldier and being ordered to kill young men like him and ultimately to die himself. Would he have volunteered again, given the same choice? Of the nation I simply want to ask the following moral question - while a great many of these men and women were hero’s in every sense, I’m sure, and died for a good cause and freely sacrificed themselves for the good of mankind, and bought our freedom, can we not admit that some of them, indeed perhaps many, or perhaps all of them, were simply wasted? Could we stand to admit that? Could we face it if a generation of young men were, in fact, murdered in muddy fields?


I believe that many wars, perhaps all wars, do waste lives, which is to say the names on the memorials could rightly be thought of as murder victims. Victims of our leaders’ ignorance, hubris or greed, and of the enemy. But I’d suggest that they were murdered not by these powerful men necessarily, the Kings, Prime Ministers and Generals. Not totally anyway. But by political machinery for which, given the choice, they would not have agreed to die instead of staying at home with their families and seeing their kids grow up. If you think of the war dead that way, as the victims of a kind of a gentile holocaust, does that make Remembrance Day more difficult? Do the ceremonies we’ve chosen seem as appropriate? I think those thoughts are understandably difficult to live with because they raise the possibility that another, equally wasteful set of wars are going on right now, and that there’ll likely be fresh ones for our children and grandchildren to be wasted in too.


A Modest Proposal

An open email I sent today to senior BBC News guy Peter Horrocks and some of his chums. Is all I do watch, complain about and now wind up the BBC? Yes, looks like. I'll try for a bit of variety next time...

Dear Peter & Co

I have a suggestion to make, if I may.

I know times are tough, and I imagine resources are stretched pretty thin at the moment. Never the less when I see the noble institution of the BBC struggling to allocate the necessary time to what is obviously a crucial subject, nay a truly nail-biting fulcrum of international affairs, I must speak out.

Your news room has made a brave effort since the spring. Credit to them for that. Until then I didn't know what I was missing. But since then I think it's obvious that this is one very important issue which has been had to jostle for airtime in a very undignified way, fighting for adequate coverage with stories of less gravity, like war and economic meltdown. To show you what I mean here are some of the stories, all of which your journalists had to somehow render down to only the most pertinent facts for lack of time and column inches. For shame.

"DUKE AND DUCHESS OF CAMBRIDGE WATCH INBETWEENERS MOVIE - Prince William and Kate Middleton were seen out watching The Inbetweeners Movie on Wednesday evening. The royal couple, both 29, were said to have been laughing out loud at the British comedy."

An historical milestone. I will never forget where I was when I heard that. Yes, the JFK assassination, 9/11 and now this.


"ROYAL COUPLE CHOOSE KENSINGTON PALACE APARTMENT AND LONDON HOME...But the couple will not move into the family-sized apartment for two years, because structural improvements are needed to make it habitable."

It's your duty to keep the nation updated on that one. Perhaps you could do a live feed of the builders scratching their backsides for 24 months?

"QUEEN AND DAVID CAMERON ATTEND ANNUAL BRAEMAR GATHERING - Thousands of people have been enjoying Highland dancing and pipe bands at the Braemar Highland Gathering. There had been some speculation that Prince William and his wife Catherine might also be there."

If there are any other events William and Wife didn't go to then you must let the people know. Preferably in advance next time. Also where was the analysis? Why did the happy couple choose not to go? Was William a affecting rescue in his helicopter? Was his kilt in the wash?

I hate tossing cabers!

And here's my personal favorite...

"NEWLY-WED PRINCE WILLIAM 'LEFT HANDBRAKE ON' - Prince William apparently left the handbrake on as he drove his new bride Catherine away in a classic Aston Martin, a royal photographer has said."

Why there wasn't a panorama special on that one I'll never know. Still I like the way you put the inverted commas in there, likely on sound legal advice. After all, what if you presented such a contentious allegation as fact and it was later proven erroneous? A inaccuracy like that would break a solemn trust and leave some pretty ugly scar tissue on the psyche of the nation. It wouldn't do.

Finally I did a quick search on your website for "Prince William", and found just 11 items which featured him in the past 11 days. By my maths that works out at an average, (though I must caveat this is only a very rough guestimate), of less than 1.1 stories a day!

Only one a day?!! One is not content with one.

And its not just the quantity, it's the quality as well. Why when the latest story broke - "NoW PAID PI TO WATCH ROYALS AND CELEBRITIES" - it was all the BBC News 24 anchorman could do to keep the guest expert on topic. There he was waffling on about the 100+ other high profile individuals who were followed around by News International's PI and no less than 3 times the anchor had to interject for a little more clarity on William! Was the looping video track of William getting in and out of vehicles, flying a plane, beckoning people to sit down and rubbing his bald head not enough to focus this man's attention on the matter at hand? That never gets old by the way - watching that loop over and over for minutes on end. New layers of deeper insight keep revealing themselves.

There must be legions of people up and down the UK, polishing their commemorative plates with anxious energy, wondering "What does William think?" and "How does William fit into all this?", about nearly every news item I should think. We're all living, I fear, in a "William vacuum".

Commemorative Urns available now

It's obvious to me you have but one choice. You must dedicate a whole new channel if you want to do that young man any justice.

I expect you'll want to get your branding people to have the final say but here are my ideas on what to call the new channel. What about "BBC William" or "The Prince B Billy C Channel" or perhaps even the somewhat whimsical, and my personal preference; "Willy One"?


Let me know your thoughts.

Oh, and before this gets embarrassing let me make another of my preferences known; on one, I fear inevitable, matter. The Family Saxe-Coburg and Gotha might well want to bestow on me a peerage or a knighthood or at least some kind of _BE suffix for this patriotic suggestion. Alas I'm a simple man, content to use the honorific "Peon" in my more formal correspondences. But if they want to show their gratitude then a simple signed piece of William memorabilia will be more than enough. A polo shirt, pair of ermine underwear or limited production tea-towel would be great - with the message of appreciation made out to "Ebay".

Best

Peon