(Photograph: UK Parliament/Jessica Taylor/Stephen Pike, CC BY 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons)
We are being led by fools wrote Professor Matt Goodwin, the author of best seller Values, Voice and Virtue, an investigation into the growing societal chasm between an unaccountable and sanctimonious self-proclaimed elite, and the working people of this country, who pay their bills.
As he notes, one side sees the world as flat, borderless, and culture-free, while the other is deeply attached to the country’s character, borders, and history. One side represents a small percentage of the total population, the other the vast majority.
Strangely, the political power of both sides is inversely proportional to their actual numbers. The minority imposes its views, regulations, and laws on the majority without relenting. At no point does that same minority feel the need to seek the consent of the majority.
Quite the opposite, to that grouping, “consent” means simply to secure all it wants while their opponents are forbidden from speaking up. The threat of retribution, as we know, is real: job losses, “debanking” or indeed harassment and arrest, among other things.
Rather than working to solve the problem, our self-appointed elites continually double-down on their bet: that the accumulation of ever more powers will be consequence free for them. Having conquered the heights of political power, they can do as they wish.
To them we have only one option: to accept meekly what they have in store for us and pay for the privilege of seeing our country dismantled. Democracy died a while ago. They won and we lost (for the moment).
Parliament, the institution through which the voice of the electorate is supposed to be heard, has been defanged over time. Without checks, they can and do the exact opposite of what we want. As a result, we should no longer pour our ire only on our political class. Most are merely actors in a play, whose lines are written for them by others.
In theory, they have the power and the legitimacy bestowed on them by their electoral victory; in practice, the Civil Service advances its agenda regardless of what their supposed political masters, and the people, might want.
Our politicians might put their signature to documents and hold office, but the power is in the hands of our permanently funded civil servants – the true revolutionaries. To them we owe the degrading of our armed forces, sacrificed as they are on an altar of Diversity; our open borders; our politicised police; our schools as centres of indoctrination not of learning; and our universities’ prostitution, selling their increasingly worthless degrees to the highest bidders.
Indeed, on this topic, our own top 20 universities were exposed as preferring to nurture slow-witted rich foreigners than poor gifted native children, as was reported by Jonathan Calvert, investigative editor for The Times, in which he showed that “while Britons need straight A’s to get onto prestigious Russell Group degree courses, their international classmates can buy their way in”.
Consequently, our civil servants must now become the object of intense scrutiny. Their names, reasoning and powers must be broadly known and understood. Conflicts of interest must be thoroughly examined, not by insiders, but by us, the eternal outsiders.
They must also become eminently sackable, with privileges that extend no further than the average private sector worker.
We must demand such powers and fight to get them. Otherwise, the descent of our country into further decrepitude is all but guaranteed. Interestingly, multi-media platforms allow us to see behind the curtain to gauge their calibre. Often, perhaps unsurprisingly, it is risible.
As a case in point, on the topic of currency and cash, one of the most important issues facing us as free subjects, a few weeks ago Danny Kruger MP asked James Bowler, the Permanent Secretary of the Treasury a very simple question. It was regarding the Bank of England and the Treasury’s plans to introduce a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) – a Digital Pound – into our economy.
“What’s the CBDC for?” asked the curious Member of Parliament for Devizes, the beautiful Wiltshire market town.
James Bowler’s answer, if one can call it such, was shockingly vacuous. In this interminably uncomfortable minute, interspersed with “um”, “you know”, and nervous paper shuffling, he pronounced that “this is about being modern”.
That was it.
There was no analysis, no context, no actual knowledge of a topic that could easily turn our already troubled nation into a science fiction dystopia, in which the government controls every aspect of your spending, holds your money on its own accounts and is technologically enabled to penalise you directly and discreetly should it choose to do so.
Indeed, the Treasury Select Committee report pointed to the real dangers attached to the introduction of Central Banking Digital Currencies and sought safeguards and commitments that the government “would not have access to users’ personal data”; that the authorities would be prevented “from accessing personal data”; and that the government would “not programme a digital pound”, presumably to manipulate the currency remotely, targeting groups or individuals.
Reassurances from the Bank of England or the government are worth as much as those given to keep immigration under control, inflation at 2% or terrorist organisations from occupying the streets of our capital every Saturday. The digital pound will kill anonymity, give the government the ability to “disappear” your money and block certain users from purchasing items on a whim. The people entrusted with keeping the commitments sought by the Treasury Select Committee will be the likes of James Bowler.
Imagine for a second what such government officials would have done with that power to those who doubted the imposition of mandates during Covid, and who have been proven right in hindsight. As it happens, James Bowler led the Covid Taskforce from October 2020. As his CV states, he was responsible for the management and leadership of the “government’s strategy to tackle the pandemic” – The biggest and most expensive policy failure in the history of our Nation.
The highest, and presumably most talented, bureaucrat in our most powerful institution, cannot string a sentence together, explain why a digital currency is needed, or give context to this crucial currency change. He is supposed to be one of our most impressive “experts”. If he is, the state of our country is no surprise.
Professor Matt Goodwin opined that we are being led by fools. Perhaps, he gives them too much credit. It is much more likely that we are being led by frauds.
Alex Story is Head of Business Development at a City broker working with Hedge Funds and other financial institutions. He stood for parliament in 2005, 2010 and 2015. In 2016, he won the right to represent Yorkshire & the Humber in the European Parliament. He didn’t take the seat.
This piece first appeared in Country Squire Magazine, and is reproduced by kind permission.
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Absolutely spot on analysis of where we are currently at. The attitudes of national politicians though are also replicated throughout Local Government (on the whole run by self-seeking highly paid inept ‘senior officers’ or regional demi-gods of the Khan type), Quangos that are merely Civil Service units in disguise and the Churches. I’m sure other parts of National life are similarly tainted.
Fools elected by bigger fools.
Yes, hold the civil service to account. There are easy ways to start: publicise their pay grades, pension entitlements and holiday allowances. Concerning holidays: after 10 years’ “service” in one department, civil servants get 35 days’ annual leave a year (excluding bank holidays). 35. Yes, thirty-five. If facts like these are collected, verified and published, the public outcry will be devastating to the civil service.