So, because of Covid-19, filming of Eastenders has been
cancelled. https://www.thesun.co.uk/tvandshowbiz/11197887/eastenders-cancels-coronavirus-pandemic/
Of course, Eastenders themselves
were cancelled long ago, thanks to the financialised economy that made
homeowning there a bigger fantasy than the TV series, now regularly shot in
Hertfordshire. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walford
To be a Cockney, traditionally you
had to have been born within sound of the church bells of St Mary-le-Bow,
Cheapside. Our Dad was – it was in the borough of Lambeth, but the noise
carried over the water; as did the 1917 munitions factory explosion in
Silvertown, which his mother still remembered in the 1970s.
Now, a three-bed semi in
Silvertown goes for the thick end of half a million nicker https://www.rightmove.co.uk/house-prices/detail.html?country=england&locationIdentifier=REGION%5E85381&searchLocation=Silvertown&propertyType=3&referrer=listChangeCriteria
, as with the neighbouring boroughs of Victoria Docks, North Woolwich etc –
double that of humble old Brum (£176k) https://www.rightmove.co.uk/house-prices/detail.html?country=england&locationIdentifier=REGION%5E162&searchLocation=Birmingham&propertyType=3&referrer=listChangeCriteria
.
Mind you, it’s getting harder to
find a Brummie, too. In the 1980s, Gas Street Basin was full of old
narrowboats. The area was dirty and dark, the canal surface a bloom of rubbish.
Warehouses rotted slowly by the water’s edge. Then the gentrification started, but
even at the turn of the ‘90s I met an old woman in a house off Broad Street, still
making widgets and dropping them into a bucket inside her front door. Where are
the metal-bashers now?
The nation has become a museum of
itself; a place where people used to manufacture, used to family-farm and make
a living at it, rather than take up shepherding as a middle-class rural
pastime. Our cities have been rebuilt with borrowed money, our youngsters have
(mostly) been excluded from property ownership, mortgaged for their college
education, denied access to final salary pension schemes, entertained with
vicious TV and cinema, distracted with officially enabled alcohol abuse, (but
warned ‘drink responsibly’), tacitly encouraged in substance abuse (‘don’t
prosecute, help them’), given the false hope of escape via a big win in
gambling (but ‘when the fun stops, stop.’)
We are governed by moneymakers who
keep us subdued with sentimental reminiscences, cultural illusions and snarling
drama serials vicariously acting out the confusion and desperation of a people
unloved, left to their fate like the passengers in ‘Lord Jim.’
Yet the biggest fantasy is that of
the captains who imagine they will escape the consequences of the
socio-economic damage they have caused, fleeing to boltholes like New Zealand
or some imaginary island like The Man With The Golden Gun.
In a globalised world, the crisis
is universal and there will be nowhere to hide. Already the stock markets have
lost a third of their value, and that is before the mass redundancies and
bankruptcies have started. Shares halved in the three years post-9/11, and
recovered with monetary boosting; halved again in 2008-2009, and were rescued
by enormous subsidies to the sector that had caused the problem; now we are
going down for the third time, and already the Masters of the Universe are
hinting that perhaps the old are expendable.
The 2004 Civil Contingencies Act https://www.gov.uk/guidance/preparation-and-planning-for-emergencies-responsibilities-of-responder-agencies-and-others
required the setting up of ‘local resilience forums’ to plan for emergencies;
we are now finding out that the current emergency is merely a spotlight on the
vast systemic vulnerability that successive governments have allowed, helped to
develop, and the implications of which they have almost completely failed to
address. Like the faux Cockneys of Walford, we don’t know who we are, or where
we are.
1 comment:
Sadly, the UK has copied many of the moves in the US: destroy unions, eliminate pensions, eliminate sick leave, etc.
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