Sunday, 29 March 2009
Earth Hour: A Real Turn-Off
Monday, 9 March 2009
My Preferred Bid
Bombardier is not a UK firm at all; it’s Canadian. But it does manufacture trains in my hometown Derby. And the Japanese consortium apparently is “British led” according to major partner John Laing, and its bid includes plans to build “a world class rolling stock manufacturing facility” in either Ashby de la Zouch (Leicestershire), Sheffield or Gateshead (but disappointingly not all three). So what we have is not a fight between Britain and Japan, but an argument between two provincial towns about where the jobs should be based. Notwithstanding the pedantic and unproven point being made by the RMT union - that more UK jobs would have been secured if the contract had been awarded to Bombardier – this seems to be a parochial matter, beneath the loftier concerns of internationalists.
OK, lofty or not, it still seems to matter to some people. The friend who forwarded me the email containing the number10 link for one. In fact I daresay that quite a few of my friends and acquaintances have friends and acquaintances of their own who work for Bombardier in Derby, and for whom the Intercity Express contract would have meant better job security. And in a previous entry on this blog I said that charity begins at home, so doesn’t the fraternal spirit on which internationalism rests begin locally, with friend helping friend, always willing to lend a hand and sign a petition on each other’s behalf?
Actually, no. But it’s not the locality that puts me off – I’m probably more ready to support the actual workforce at Bombardier, Derby than the potential workforce at Ashby De La Zouch. And I think we’d all be a lot better off if we got to know a friend of a friend. The thing that turns me off the whole idea of supporting Bombardier is actually the petition itself. The words - composed by some news editor at the Derby Evening Telegraph - are hardly inspiring:
We believe that the Government should change its mind on its decision to select Japanese-led consortium Agility ahead of Derby train-maker Bombardier as the preferred bidder for a £7.5bn contract to build new Intercity trains.Such a polite request, expressed in New Labour management-speak, directed at our man in Number Ten! Let us sincerely hope he reads it and has a Pauline conversion about the DoT officials’ preferred bidder. Or rather let us not waste our valuable time in trying to engender such abject parochialism initiated by that champion of abject parochialism the local paper. If instead we want to forge new ties with fellow workers in our home town then why not do it direct? Why not visit them at their workplace and get to know them personally instead of mediating the whole relationship with a brief missive on abject parochialism directed to Gordon Brown?
I work for a local authority where job cuts have been announced. This potentially gives me something in common with the Bombardier workers whose managers doubtless now have their excuse at the ready when at some future point in time they announce reductions. A real bread-and-butter issue like this could foster stronger ties which would not necessarily stop at the city boundary – they could reach into Ashby De La Zouch, AND Sheffield AND Gateshead. It is a little early to be saying workers of the world unite, but surely any burgeoning internationalist spirit we have could stretch this far?
Thursday, 5 March 2009
The Selfless Giant
The second is signed by public sector union Unison (among others) and goes by the heading "Global public health care plea". It urges readers to sign a pledge demanding that the World Bank insist that private healthcare provision be extended to people in the world's poorest countries. What a noble gesture!
It's easy to be angry at Unison, an organisation that gets a large chunk of its funding from ordinary people who expect it to concentrate on defending their living standards, for choosing instead to promote the rights of complete (though no doubt thoroughly likeable) strangers in the furthest corners of the Earth. But before we all start clamouring for "British jobs for Britishers" let us recall how hard it is these days to appear in the least bit selfish. Unison might be paid to defend its members pay and working conditions, but putting this into practice and actually asking for something for its members is not a straightforward task for union reps, which is why I am not a member.
Then again, not being a member of a collective organisation is no solution to this problem. Writing poetry to send to the local newspaper might at best win you some sympathy (similar to the heartfelt feeling I expressed at the end of the first paragraph), but can you eat sympathy? Can you impress the neighbours with sympathy? Can you get Sky Sports on sympathy?
Whatever happened to selfishness? Not the sort that gets condemned in soap operas and Tonight with Trevor MacDonald, but the sort that identifies the interests of one's own family and friends as one's own (wait a minute - that is the sort that gets condemned on Trevor MacDonald, especially when a builder is involved). Not so long ago, this sort of selfishness was known as charity-that-begins-at-home. It was assumed that community interests might be served if people first looked after themselves and their immediate neighbours, like ripples spreading across a pond. That's the sort of thing promoted by philosopher Kwame Anthony Appiah (pictured) in his book Cosmopolitanism - a sort of universalism that grows through people responding to each other through immediate connexions unhampered by cultural barriers.
Appiah's philosophy is by no means perfect but at least it avoids the abstract universalism expressed by Unison, wherein we accept without question that the complete stranger is more of a brother to us than our own brother.
Where does it leave us when facing job cuts? Well, first thing is not to assume that just because you might want to keep your job, defend your pay, or even ask for more, you are somehow being immoral. In pushing for these things you might find that you end up forming immediate ties with people whom you previously thought existed only beyond some cultural barrier. And forming a handful of these ties will probably do more good morally than all the business plans put together by your employer for surviving the credit crunch. Universalism - the view that all men are my brothers, and that all old people are my granny and grandpa, etc - begins with a bit of selfishness.
We don't need poetry. We don't need to think of those less fortunate on the other side of the world. Let us talk to our neighbour, and let him talk to his, about the problems we face here and now. And let us rediscover the chain that links us to our neighbours across the globe.
Monday, 2 March 2009
Great Scott! You want how much?
Of course, the sponsorship that goes on nowadays is so much more worthwhile – it provides income for that multi-million pound industry called “charity”; it gives the BBC and ITV something to film; and it makes a lot of fund-raisers feel good about themselves. I daresay it even sometimes helps homeless kids and starving Africans and the like, but these are, naturally, of lesser concern. From the BBC website it is clear that the main focus of the event is not the malaria bed nets (don't get me started on those) for Tanzanian tots, but the sheer celebrity of those grizzled adventurers Chris Moyles, Ronan Keating, and Denise Van Outen. Not having the Edwardian equivalents of these aboard the Terra Nova when it set sail was, I suppose, Captain Scott’s first and costliest mistake.
I don’t object to fund-raising; I don’t object to helping other people (whether or not they are ‘less fortunate’ than I); I don’t even object to people entering fun runs, walking the Great Wall of China or having their heads shaved. But put all this together into a filmed (and doubtless podcast) charity event and it all becomes so bloody objectionable.
Lately a new – and particularly morbid – ingredient has been added to this mix: doing it ‘in memory’ (why not ‘in remembrance’?) of someone. Every year thousands of women throughout the UK ‘race’ a distance of 5km, few of them gunning for Tirunesh Dibaba's 14:11.15 world record, but most of them wearing a picture of a dead person on their T-shirt. This is the women-only ‘Race for Life’ organised by Cancer Research UK. Now, I wouldn’t knock cancer research – more money should be poured into this. But I would knock Cancer Research for the way the whole Race for Life has been promoted. The aim seems not to be the raising of funds so that more scientists can peer through more microscopes at more cells; the aim is to get women to take part in a shared experience of grief. But grief won’t cure cancer.
The event-sponsorship-celebrity-grief cocktail is mixed in bad taste, and it fuzzes the focus that we once had on what we consider worthwhile human achievements. The meaning of sponsorship needs to be reclaimed as the provision of cash that enables any of these worthwhile human achievements to be undertaken. If you want to be charitable, then help someone you know (charity does begin at home), or just make a straightforward donation yourself, but don't go asking me for 'sponsorship'. We need to sponsor genuine exploration, whether this be of Mount Kilimanjaro, the South Pole or of the nuclei of human cells.