Britons in Debt

  1.9m UK households failed to make at least one mortgage, rent, loan, credit card or other bill payment over the last month.

With the UK heading into recession, mortgages and rent costs rising and the energy price guarantee becoming less generous from April, consumers will only face further financial pressures in 2023 leading to more defaults, it warned.

About 4m households are likely to face higher mortgage payments in 2023, with the average monthly mortgage payment rising to £1,000 (up from £750), the equivalent of about 17% of pre-tax income.

Earlier this month the Trades Union Congress said 2022 has seen the sharpest fall in real wages since 1977 and the second worst on record since 1945. Analysis of official statistics found that real wages fell by an average of £76 a month in 2022 as a result of pay not keeping pace with inflation.

Nearly 2m UK households behind on bill payments as Christmas approaches | UK cost of living crisis | The Guardian

UK – More Billionaires

 



The number of UK billionaires has increased by a fifth since the onset of the Covid pandemic. 

 The number of UK billionaires increased from 147 in 2020 to 177 this year, with the median billionaire now holding about £2bn.

“This sudden explosion in extreme wealth was in large part due to measures aimed at lessening the impact of Covid-19 on the economy, as central banks pumped trillions of dollars into financial markets, leading to a stock market boom which effectively lined the pockets of shareholders…” Jo Wittams, co-executive director of the Equality Trust, said. “…Every year we are invited to celebrate the very richest individuals and families in the UK, while food bank usage continues to increase, 3.9 million children are living in poverty and 6.7m households struggle to heat their homes. That these are two sides of the same coin is very rarely mentioned.”

Call for wealth tax as UK billionaire numbers up by 20% since pandemic | The super-rich | The Guardian


The Dispossessed and the Displaced

 



2022 had the unwelcome distinction of being the first to see over 100 million people displaced worldwide.  This milestone was reached by the middle of the year.

Over 50 million people were internally displaced within their own countries, over 30 million were refugees forced to flee their countries, and some 4.3 million were stateless.

More than 70 percent of all refugees came from five countries mired in violent conflict: Syria, Venezuela, Ukraine, Afghanistan, and South Sudan. Climate-related emergencies, meanwhile — including severe floods in Pakistan and drought in Somalia — contributed heavily to the growing number of people internally displaced.

 Between October 2018 and June 2021, the U.S. denied asylum to Haitians more than any other nationality.  Many Haitians have had to flee their country, which prompted the UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi to call on all countries “to stand in solidarity with Haiti” and “not to return Haitians to a country that is extremely fragile.” Unfortunately, the U.S. accelerated the mass expulsion of more than 25,000 Haitians between September 2021 and May 2022. They were returned to Haiti where they face likely harm and humanitarian disaster.

Opinion | This Has Been a Horrific Year for the Globally Displaced | Farrah Hassen (commondreams.org)

Pork or People?

 Despite animal crueltyenvironmental destruction, and human health impacts factory farming provides affordable meat to our populations, creates jobs in small towns, stimulates local economies, and helps families prosper so goes the argument presented by the meat industry. It is the pig’s or your own family’s welfare. 

 Have rural communities actually experienced their purported economic benefits? Has factory farming made life easier for the people in small towns?

2022 report by Food and Water Watch suggests the opposite. The report takes pig farms in Iowa as a case study of how our corporate-controlled food systems are failing environments, animals, and communities.

Factory farms, facilities that raise thousands of animals in extreme confinement to maximize production and profit, operated by multibillion-dollar corporations like Smithfield and JBS now dominate the meat market. Factory farms use this dominance to set the terms for pig prices, preventing fair pricing, contributing to market volatility, and pushing down the real price of pigs. The fact that these enormous corporate firms and their equally enormous factory farms control the market is irrefutable. 

But are they at least providing more jobs on the ground for the community? Despite years of claiming the contrary, the answer is straightforward: absolutely not. The study found that between 1982 and 2017, real median household income and total wage jobs declined in the counties that sold the most pigs and had the largest farms. The population also took a steep drop, at twice the rate of Iowa’s more rural counties. Job losses, too, were commonplace. Statewide, total farm employment dropped 44% between 1982 and 2017—the boom years for factory farming.

The results of this study are clear: Factory farming is bad for the economy, driving up the price of pigs without returning profits to local farmers. It puts local farms out of business and results in net job loss. Families suffer hardship as incomes decline, and property values diminish due to rampant pollution from factory farms.  It ensures that factory-farmed pigs grow up and die in misery, while our climate catastrophe worsens, human health deteriorates, and local communities suffer.

 Meat consumption increases the risk of developing heart disease, diabetes, pneumonia, and more, the meat industry’s routine use of antibiotics to protect their bottom line results in antibiotic resistance in both farmed animals and the people who eat them.

Factory farms are not good for local communities. Who are factory farms good for? Large corporations. Factory farming—and its corporate chokehold on rural communities—is just as brutal to humans as it is to animals.

The meat industry has created a false dichotomy that pits people against animals – Alternet.org

“First-generation Locals”

 How should we refer to the children of immigrants? The traditional answer is “second-generation immigrants”, yet “first-generation locals” is far more accurate, as a new research paper co-authored by Alan Manning, one of the UK’s top economists, points out.

The key issue for first-generation locals isn’t that their parents are migrants – it’s that they are often poor.

Class, not parents’ place of birth, determines the life chances of ‘first-generation locals’ | Torsten Bell | The Guardian

Capitalism’s Christmas Gift

 



 Many American workers are suffering the mental and financial anguish of being suddenly laid off. After corporations complained of labor shortages through 2021 and 2022, several companies have shed workers in mass layoffs as 2022 comes to a close. Numerous high-profile tech companies, including Facebook’s Meta, Twitter and Amazon, announced mass layoffs in recent weeks.

Catalent, a pharmaceutical manufacturing contractor, recently informed employees the company is going to cut about 600 jobs in Indiana, Texas, and Maryland over the next several weeks, as demand for Covid vaccines has dropped significantly. Other corporations have announced mass layoffs right before the holidays, claiming economic downturns have driven the cuts, even as they record profits and the economy showing no signs of a downturn. 

Stellantis, which manufactures the Jeep Cherokee SUV, announced on 9 December the closure of an Illinois plant resulting in more than 1,200 workers being laid off by the end of February 2023. 

“It came without the slightest bit of warning and absolutely no details. It wasn’t even a rumor so it just dropped like a bomb,” said Deanna Viel, a worker at the plant Belvidere, Illinois.

Right before Thanksgiving, about 2,700 workers at United Furniture – a company that has facilities in Mississippi, California and North Carolina – received an email notifying them they were laid off immediately.

“These companies are all making money. They are doing it because other companies are doing it,” said Stanford Graduate School of Business Prof Jeffrey Pfeffer on the recent trend of tech companies shedding employees. “Layoffs often do not cut costs, as there are many instances of laid-off employees being hired back as contractors, with companies paying the contracting firm. Layoffs often do not increase stock prices, in part because layoffs can signal that a company is having difficulty. Layoffs do not increase productivity. Layoffs do not solve what is often the underlying problem, which is often an ineffective strategy, a loss of market share or too little revenue. Layoffs are basically a bad decision.” 

 A study by UK researchers found a layoff to be the 7th most stressful life experience, correlated to significant increases in developing a new health condition as well as the risk of suicide, depression and substance abuse.

‘Heartless’ mass layoffs hit US workers ahead of holidays | Business | The Guardian

Us and Them

 



 Today, the world is facing a never before seen web of crises that will continue to have severe consequences for many years to come. 

According to the World Food Programme (WFP), more than 828 million people are going to bed hungry every night. 

The number of those facing acute food insecurity has more than doubled, from 135 million to 345 million, since 2019, and nearly 50 million people are already on the verge of starvation.

 The world is becoming more polarised every day, with social cohesion eroding and conflict increasing. This crisis is a testament to the high levels of interdependence in the modern world. It demonstrates we cannot continue with an “Us vs Them” rhetoric while “our” well-being is so deeply reliant on “their” actions and vice versa.  The only way to resolve crises and protect lives is through solidarity and collaboration. 

The world’s food system is more interconnected and complex than ever, built upon layers of transnational dependencies. It is why a war in Europe can exacerbate a famine in Somalia.

But instead of reducing the fragility of the food system, the latest international efforts led by the United States to end hunger are only exacerbating it — especially for Africa — by globalising the system further. When the world is under severe stress, globalisation is not a strength but a weakness, not a foundation for the system’s stability but a reason for its fragility. Any calamity anywhere in the world — whether a viral outbreak, drought or conflict — is a shock to the entire system, but one felt most acutely by the most vulnerable people and in the most vulnerable places. It does not mean that the global agricultural system lacks any advantages. Absent any shocks, it is capable of producing and distributing food with extreme efficiency. 

80 percent of the world’s population depends at least partly on food imports to eat, and the money they spend on imported food has tripled in the past 25 years. 

About half of the 50 countries with the highest pandemic-induced price increases are also among the countries most dependent on food imports, and about three-quarters of those crops originate in the Global South.

 More than 95 percent of Botswana, Mexico, and Jamaica’s imports of rice, wheat, and corn are from countries most affected by the pandemic, making countries like them disproportionately vulnerable to its disruptive effects.

The US government’s USAID long-term response will be to invest an additional $75m in “large-scale food fortification”, or adding nutrients to commodity cereal crops through industrial processing. African farmers have been cultivating nutrient-rich crops for as long as they have existed. Instead of helping them to provide nutritious diets to African people, the USAID plan only makes room for them to produce commodities for factories.

With the world’s attention shifting towards the climate impact of agriculture, US officials and agribusiness companies have tried to recast the industrial model as a solution to that problem as well with he new greenwashing campaign, dubbed “climate-smart agriculture”.

 A 2018 study, scholars from the University of British Columbia found that farm-level biodiversity has decreased as farms have grown bigger. Today, just three crops — wheat, corn and rice — overwhelmingly produced in just five countries comprise nearly half of all calories consumed globally and 86 percent of all cereal exports. The focus on just a few crops has made the market extremely prone to price volatility. Worse still, it concentrates power in the hands of those farmers with the most land, capital and technology, along with the multinational grain traders who rake in massive profits during food crises. With the entire system engineered to exclude them, small and medium farmers who still produce almost half of the world’s food calories are being set up to lose.

 Jennifer Clapp, a member of the UN High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition, described the world’s current food system as rigid, inflexible, and unable to adapt to shocks like war or a pandemic. It is because Clapp says, the current hunger spike is the third such crisis in 50 years, and why more crises are highly likely in the future. Clapp, along with many food sovereignty organisations argued that the global food system needed to be dismantled in favour of more localised systems with shorter supply chains that put small and medium farmers — not multinational corporations — at their centre.

How can we end the hunger pandemic? | Opinions | Al Jazeera

Globalised food systems are making hunger worse | Food | Al Jazeera

Songs of The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists

 




This masterpiece by Clarion socialist Robert Noonan (pen name Robert Tressell) turns popular song into pathetic irony against the capitalist system and its enforcers — its employers, managers and Christian consolers.
* * *

Ch 19. The Filling of the Tank

The Old Dear now put a penny in the slot of the polyphone, and winding it up started it playing. It was some unfamiliar tune, but when the Semi-drunk Painter heard it he rose unsteadily to his feet and began shuffling and dancing about, singing:



Oh, we’ll inwite you to the wedding,

An’ we’ll ‘ave a glorious time!

Where the boys an’ girls is a-dancing,

An’ we’ll all get drunk on wine.

‘Ere! that’s quite enough o’ that!’ cried the landlord, roughly. ‘We don’t want that row ‘ere.’

* * *

While they were pouring this down their throats, Crass took a penny from his waistcoat pocket and put it in the slot of the polyphone. The landlord put a fresh disc into it and wound it up and it began to play ‘The Boys of the Bulldog Breed.’ The Semi-drunk happened to know the words of the chorus of this song, and when he heard the music he started unsteadily to his feet and with many fierce looks and gestures began to roar at the top of his voice:



They may build their ships, my lads,

And try to play the game,

But they can’t build the boys of the Bulldog breed,

Wot made ole Hingland’s—

”Ere! Stop that, will yer?’ cried the Old Dear, fiercely. ‘I told you once before that I don’t allow that sort of thing in my ‘ouse!’

* * *

Ch 21. The Reign of Terror. The Great Money Trick

‘Of course,’ continued the kind-hearted capitalist, ‘if it were not for foreign competition I should be able to sell these things that you have made, and then I should be able to give you Plenty of Work again: but until I have sold them to somebody or other, or until I have used them myself, you will have to remain idle.’

‘Well, this takes the bloody biskit, don’t it?’ said Harlow.

‘The only thing as I can see for it,’ said Philpot mournfully, ‘is to ‘ave a unemployed procession.’

‘That’s the idear,’ said Harlow, and the three began to march about the room in Indian file, singing:



We’ve got no work to do-oo-oo

We’ve got no work to do-oo-oo!

Just because we’ve been workin’ a dam sight too hard,

Now we’ve got no work to do.

As they marched round, the crowd jeered at them and made offensive remarks. Crass said that anyone could see that they were a lot of lazy, drunken loafers who had never done a fair day’s work in their lives and never intended to.

‘We shan’t never get nothing like this, you know,’ said Philpot. ‘Let’s try the religious dodge.’

‘All right,’ agreed Harlow. ‘What shall we give ’em?’

‘I know!’ cried Philpot after a moment’s deliberation. ‘”Let my lower lights be burning.” That always makes ’em part up.’

The three unemployed accordingly resumed their march round the room, singing mournfully and imitating the usual whine of street-singers:



Trim your fee-bil lamp me brither-in,

Some poor sail-er tempest torst,

Strugglin’ ‘ard to save the ‘arb-er,

Hin the dark-niss may be lorst,

So let try lower lights be burning,

Send ‘er gleam acrost the wave,

Some poor shipwrecked, struggling seaman,

You may rescue, you may save.

‘Kind frens,’ said Philpot, removing his cap and addressing the crowd, ‘we’re hall honest British workin’ men, but we’ve been hout of work for the last twenty years on account of foreign competition and over-production. We don’t come hout ‘ere because we’re too lazy to work; it’s because we can’t get a job.

* * *

Ch 22. The Phrenologist

They all felt pretty certain that Misery would return no more that day, and presently Harlow began to sing the old favourite. ‘Work! for the night is coming!’ the refrain of which was soon taken up by nearly everyone in the house:



Work! for the night is coming,

Work in the morning hours.

Work! for the night is coming,

Work ‘mid springing flowers.



Work while the dew is sparkling,

Work in the noonday sun!

Work! for the night is coming

When man’s work is done!

When this hymn was finished, someone else, imitating the whine of a street-singer, started, ‘Oh, where is my wandering boy tonight?’ and then Harlow—who by some strange chance had a penny—took it out of his pocket and dropped it on the floor, the ringing of the coin being greeted with shouts of ‘Thank you, kind lady,’ from several of the singers.

* * *

Ch 23. The “Open-air”

Evolution was not more satisfactory, because although it was undoubtedly true as far as it went, it only went part of the way, leaving the great question still unanswered by assuming the existence—in the beginning—of the elements of matter, without a cause! The question remained unanswered because it was unanswerable. Regarding this problem man was but—



An infant crying in the night,

An infant crying for the light

And with no language but a cry.

All the same, it did not follow, because one could not explain the mystery oneself, that it was right to try to believe an unreasonable explanation offered by someone else.

* * *

A bright light was burning inside this lantern and on the pane of white, obscured glass which formed the sides, visible from where Owen and Frankie were standing, was written in bold plain letters that were readable even at that distance, the text:

Be not deceived: God is not mocked!

The man whose voice had attracted Frankie’s attention was reading out a verse of a hymn:



I heard the voice of Jesus say,

Behold, I freely give,

The living water, thirsty one,

Stoop down and drink, and live.

I came to Jesus and I drank

Of that life giving stream,

My thirst was quenched,

My soul revived,

And now I live in Him.

The individual who gave out this hymn was a tall, thin man whose clothes hung loosely on the angles of his round-shouldered, bony form. His long, thin legs—about which the baggy trousers hung in ungraceful folds—were slightly knock-kneed, and terminated in large, flat feet.

* * *

Ch 25. The Oblong

‘Oh, of course everybody’s an idjit except you,’ sneered Crass, who was beginning to feel rather fogged.

‘I rise to a pint of order,’ said Easton.

‘And I rise to order a pint,’ cried Philpot.

* * *

Ch 29. The Pandorama

‘After a rather stormy passage we arrives safely at the beautiful city of Berlin, in Germany, just in time to see a procession of unemployed workmen being charged by the military police. This picture is hintitled “Tariff Reform means Work for All”.’

As an appropriate musical selection Bert played the tune of a well-known song, and the children sang the words:



To be there! to be there!

Oh, I knew what it was to be there!

And when they tore me clothes,

Blacked me eyes and broke me nose,

Then I knew what it was to be there!

While this picture was being rolled away the band played and the children sang with great enthusiasm:



Rule, Brittania, Brittania rules the waves!

Britons, never, never, never shall be slaves!

* * *

Again we turns the ‘andle and presently we comes to another very beautiful scene—”Early Morning in Trafalgar Square”. ‘Ere we see a lot of Englishmen who have been sleepin’ out all night because they ain’t got no ‘omes to go to.’

As a suitable selection for this picture, Bert played the tune of a music-hall song, the words of which were familiar to all the youngsters, who sang at the top of their voices:



I live in Trafalgar Square,

With four lions to guard me,

Pictures and statues all over the place,

Lord Nelson staring me straight in the face,

Of course it’s rather draughty,

But still I’m sure you’ll agree,

If it’s good enough for Lord Nelson,

It’s quite good enough for me.

* * *

The crowds of shabby-lookin’ chaps standin’ round the motor cars wavin’ their ‘ats and cheerin’ is workin’ men. Both the candidates is tellin’ ’em the same old story, and each of ’em is askin’ the workin’ men to elect ‘im to Parlimint, and promisin’ to do something or other to make things better for the lower horders.’

As an appropriate selection to go with this picture, Bert played the tune of a popular song, the words being well known to the children, who sang enthusiastically, clapping their hands and stamping their feet on the floor in time with the music:



We’ve both been there before,

Many a time, many a time!

We’ve both been there before,

Many a time!

Where many a gallon of beer has gone.

To colour his nose and mine,

We’ve both been there before,

Many a time, many a time!

* * *

The bloke on the ground is a Socialist, and the reason why they’re kickin’ ‘is face in is because ‘e said that the only difference between Slumrent and Mandriver was that they was both alike.’

While the audience were admiring this picture, Bert played another well-known tune, and the children sang the words:



Two lovely black eyes,

Oh what a surprise!

Only for telling a man he was wrong,

Two lovely black eyes.

* * *

The only one who had not come prepared in this respect was little Rosie, and even she—so as to be the same as the others—insisted on reciting the only piece she knew. Kneeling on the hearthrug, she put her hands together, palm to palm, and shutting her eyes very tightly she repeated the verse she always said every night before going to bed:



Gentle Jesus, meek and mild,

Look on me, a little child.

Pity my simplicity,

Suffer me to come to Thee.

Then she stood up and kissed everyone in turn, and Philpot crossed over and began looking out of the window, and coughed, and blew his nose, because a nut that he had been eating had gone down the wrong way.

* * *

Ch 43. The Good Old Summer-time

Then the chairman announced that they were coming there again next Sunday at the same time, when a comrade would speak on ‘Unemployment and Poverty, the Cause and the Remedy’, and then the strangers sang a song called ‘England Arise’, the first verse being:



England Arise, the long, long night is over,

Faint in the east, behold the Dawn appear

Out of your evil dream of toil and sorrow

Arise, O England! for the day is here!

During the progress of the meeting several of the strangers had been going out amongst the crowd giving away leaflets, which many of the people gloomily refused to accept, and selling penny pamphlets, of which they managed to dispose of about three dozen.

* * *

Ch 44. The Beano

As soon as silence was obtained, Misery said that he believed that everyone there present would agree with him, when he said that they should not let the occasion pass without drinking the ‘ealth of their esteemed and respected employer, Mr Rushton. (Hear, hear.) … Everyone rose.

‘Musical honours, chaps,’ shouted Crass, waving his glass and leading off the singing which was immediately joined in with great enthusiasm by most of the men, the Semi-drunk conducting the music with a table knife:



For he’s a jolly good fellow,

For he’s a jolly good fellow,

For he’s a jolly good fel-ell-O,

And so say all of us,

So ‘ip, ‘ip, ‘ip, ‘ooray!

So ‘ip, ‘ip, ‘ip, ‘ooray!

For he’s a jolly good fellow,

For ‘e’s a jolly good fellow

For ‘e’s a jolly good fel-ell-O,

And so say all of us.

‘Now three cheers!’ shouted Crass, leading off.



Hip, hip, hip, hooray!

Hip, hip, hip, hooray!

Hip, hip, hip, hooray!

Everyone present drank Rushton’s health, or at any rate went through the motions of doing so, but during the roar of cheering and singing that preceded it several of the men stood with expressions of contempt or uneasiness upon their faces, silently watching the enthusiasts or looking at the ceiling or on the floor.

* * *

The Semi-drunk’s suggestion that someone should sing a song was received with unqualified approbation by everybody, including Barrington and the other Socialists, who desired nothing better than that the time should be passed in a manner suitable to the occasion. The landlord’s daughter, a rosy girl of about twenty years of age, in a pink print dress, sat down at the piano, and the Semi-drunk, taking his place at the side of the instrument and facing the audience, sang the first song with appropriate gestures, the chorus being rendered enthusiastically by the full strength of the company, including Misery, who by this time was slightly drunk from drinking gin and ginger beer:



Come, come, come an’ ‘ave a drink with me

Down by the ole Bull and Bush.

Come, come, come an’ shake ‘ands with me

Down by the ole Bull and Bush.

Wot cheer me little Germin band!

Fol the diddle di do!

Come an’ take ‘old of me ‘and

Come, come, come an’ ‘ave a drink with me,

Down by the old Bull and Bush,

Bush! Bush!

Protracted knocking on the tables greeted the end of the song, but as the Semi-drunk knew no other except odd verses and choruses, he called upon Crass for the next, and that gentleman accordingly sang ‘Work, Boys, Work’ to the tune of ‘Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys are marching’. As this song is the Marseillaise of the Tariff Reform Party, voicing as it does the highest ideals of the Tory workmen of this country, it was an unqualified success, for most of them were Conservatives.



Now I’m not a wealthy man,

But I lives upon a plan

Wot will render me as ‘appy as a King;

An’ if you will allow, I’ll sing it to you now,

For time you know is always on the wing.



Work, boys, work and be contented

So long as you’ve enough to buy a meal.

For if you will but try, you’ll be wealthy—bye and bye—

If you’ll only put yer shoulder to the wheel.

‘Altogether, boys,’ shouted Grinder, who was a strong Tariff Reformer, and was delighted to see that most of the men were of the same way of thinking; and the ‘boys’ roared out the chorus once more:



Work, boys, work and be contented

So long as you’ve enough to buy a meal

For if you will but try, you’ll be wealthy—bye and bye

If you’ll only put your shoulder to the wheel.

As they sang the words of this noble chorus the Tories seemed to become inspired with lofty enthusiasm. It is of course impossible to say for certain, but probably as they sang there arose before their exalted imaginations, a vision of the Past, and looking down the long vista of the years that were gone, they saw that from their childhood they had been years of poverty and joyless toil. They saw their fathers and mothers, weaned and broken with privation and excessive labour, sinking unhonoured into the welcome oblivion of the grave.

* * *

At the end of the song they gave three cheers for Tariff Reform and Plenty of Work, and then Crass, who, as the singer of the last song, had the right to call upon the next man, nominated Philpot, who received an ovation when he stood up, for he was a general favourite. He never did no harm to nobody, and he was always wiling to do anyone a good turn whenever he had the opportunity. Shouts of ‘Good old Joe’ resounded through the room as he crossed over to the piano, and in response to numerous requests for ‘The old song’ he began to sing ‘The Flower Show’:



Whilst walkin’ out the other night, not knowing where to go

I saw a bill upon a wall about a Flower Show.



So I thought the flowers I’d go and see to pass away the night.

And when I got into that Show it was a curious sight.

So with your kind intention and a little of your aid,

Tonight some flowers I’ll mention which I hope will never fade.



Omnes:

To-night some flowers I’ll mention which I hope will never fade.

There were several more verses, from which it appeared that the principal flowers in the Show were the Rose, the Thistle and the Shamrock.

* * *

When he had finished, the applause was so deafening and the demands for an encore so persistent that to satisfy them he sang another old favourite—’Won’t you buy my pretty flowers?’



Ever coming, ever going,

Men and women hurry by,

Heedless of the tear-drops gleaming,

In her sad and wistful eye

How her little heart is sighing

Thro’ the cold and dreary hours,

Only listen to her crying,

“Won’t you buy my pretty flowers?”

When the last verse of this sang had been sung five er six times, Philpot exercised his right of nominating the next singer, and called upon Dick Wantley, who with many suggestive gestures and grimaces sang ‘Put me amongst the girls’, and afterwards called upon Payne, the foreman carpenter, who gave ‘I’m the Marquis of Camberwell Green’.

* * *

This was followed by another Tory ballad, the chorus being as follows:



His clothes may be ragged, his hands may be soiled.

But where’s the disgrace if for bread he has toiled.

His ‘art is in the right place, deny it no one can

The backbone of Old England is the honest workin’ man.’

* * *

Crass’s fat face was pallid with fear as he clung trembling to his seat. Another man, very drunk and oblivious of everything, was leaning over the side of the brake, spewing into the road, while the remainder, taking no interest in the race, amused themselves by singing—conducted by the Semi-drunk—as loud as they could roar:



Has anyone seen a Germin band,

Germin Band, Germin Band?

I’ve been lookin’ about,

Pom—Pom, Pom, Pom, Pom!



‘I’ve searched every pub, both near and far,

Near and far, near and far,

I want my Fritz,

What plays tiddley bits

On the big trombone!

* * *

Ch 45. The Great Oration

The tune of ‘He’s a jolly good fellow’ was still buzzing in his head; he thrust his hands deep down in his trouser pockets, and began to polka round the room, humming softly:



I won’t do no more before breakfast!

I won’t do no more before breakfast!

I won’t do no more before breakfast!

So ‘ip ‘ip ‘ip ‘ooray!

So ‘ip ‘ip ‘ip ‘ooray So ‘ip ‘ip ‘ooray!

I won’t do no more before breakfast—etc.

‘No! and you won’t do but very little after breakfast, here!’ shouted Hunter, suddenly entering the room.

‘I’ve bin watchin’ of you through the crack of the door for the last ‘arf hour; and you’ve not done a dam’ stroke all the time. You make out yer time sheet, and go to the office at nine o’clock and git yer money; we can’t afford to pay you for playing the fool.’

* * *

‘Under existing circumstances the community is degenerating mentally and physically because the majority cannot afford to have decent houses to live in. Socialists say that the community should take in hand the business of providing proper houses for all its members, that the State should be the only landlord, that all the land and all the houses should belong to the whole people…

‘We must do this if we are to keep our old place in the van of human progress. A nation of ignorant, unintelligent, half-starved, broken-spirited degenerates cannot hope to lead humanity in its never-ceasing march onward to the conquest of the future.



Vain, mightiest fleet of iron framed;

Vain the all-shattering guns

Unless proud England keep, untamed,

The stout hearts of her sons.

‘All the evils that I have referred to are only symptoms of the one disease that is sapping the moral, mental and physical life of the nation, and all attempts to cure these symptoms are foredoomed to failure, simply because they are the symptoms and not the disease. All the talk of Temperance, and the attempts to compel temperance, are foredoomed to failure, because drunkenness is a symptom, and not the disease.’

* * *

‘A State wherein it will be possible to put into practice the teachings of Him whom so many now pretend to follow. A society which shall have justice and co-operation for its foundation, and International Brotherhood and love for its law.



Such are the days that shall be! but

What are the deeds of today,

In the days of the years we dwell in,

That wear our lives away?

Why, then, and for what we are waiting?

There are but three words to speak

“We will it,” and what is the foreman

but the dream strong wakened and weak?

‘Oh, why and for what are we waiting, while

our brothers droop and die?

And on every wind of the heavens, a

wasted life goes by.

‘How long shall they reproach us, where

crowd on crowd they dwell

Poor ghosts of the wicked city,

gold crushed, hungry hell?

‘Through squalid life they laboured in

sordid grief they died

Those sons of a mighty mother, those

props of England’s pride.

They are gone, there is none can undo

it, nor save our souls from the curse,

But many a million cometh, and shall

they be better or worse?



It is We must answer and hasten and open wide the door,

For the rich man’s hurrying terror, and the slow foot hope of the poor,

Yea, the voiceless wrath of the wretched and their unlearned discontent,

We must give it voice and wisdom, till the waiting tide be spent

Come then since all things call us, the living and the dead,

And o’er the weltering tangle a glimmering light is shed.

As Barrington descended from the Pulpit and walked back to his accustomed seat, a loud shout of applause burst from a few men in the crowd, who stood up and waved their caps and cheered again and again.

* * *

Ch 48. The Wise Men of the East

Then a rush was made to Sweater’s Emporium and several yards of cheap green ribbon were bought, and divided up into little pieces, which they tied into their buttonholes, and thus appropriately decorated, formed themselves into military order, four deep, and marched through all the principal streets, up and down the Grand Parade, round and round the Fountain, and finally over the hill to Windley, singing to the tune of ‘Tramp, tramp, tramp, the Boys are marching’:



Vote, Vote, Vote for Adam Sweater!

Hang old Closeland on a tree!

Adam Sweater is our man,

And we’ll have him if we can,

Then we’ll always have the biggest loaf for tea.

The spectacle presented by these men—some of them with grey heads and beards—as they marked time or tramped along singing this childish twaddle, would have been amusing if it had not been disgusting.

By way of variety they sang several other things, including:



We’ll hang ole Closeland

On a sour apple tree



and



Rally, Rally, men of Windley

For Sweater’s sure to win

As they passed the big church in Quality Street, the clock began to strike. It was one of those that strike four chimes at each quarter of the hour. It was now ten o’clock so there were sixteen musical chimes:



Ding, dong! Ding Dong!

Ding dong! Ding dong!

Ding dong! Ding dong!

Ding dong! Ding dong!

They all chanted A-dam Sweat-er’ in time with the striking clock. In the same way the Tories would chant:



Grab—all Close—land!

Grab—all Close—land!

Grab—all Close—land!

Grab—all Close—land!

This beautiful idea—’Plenty of Work’—appealed strongly to the Tory workmen. They seemed to regard themselves and their children as a sort of machines or beasts of burden, created for the purpose of working for the benefit of other people. They did not think it right that they should Live, and enjoy the benefits of civilization. All they desired for themselves and their children was ‘Plenty of Work’.

* * *

A free fight ensued. Both sides fought like savages, but as the Liberals were outnumbered by about three to one, they were driven off the field with great slaughter; most of the torch poles were taken from them, and the banner was torn to ribbons. Then the Tories went back to the Fountain carrying the captured torches, and singing to the tune of ‘Has anyone seen a German Band?’



Has anyone seen a Lib’ral Flag,

Lib’ral Flag, Lib’ral Flag?

* * *

Sir Featherstone Blood sat down amid a wild storm of cheering, and then the procession reformed, and, reinforced by the audience from the hall, they proceeded to march about the dreary streets, singing, to the tune of the ‘Men of Harlech’:



Vote for Sweater, Vote for Sweater!

Vote for Sweater, VOTE FOR SWEATER!

He’s the Man, who has a plan,

To liberate and reinstate the workers!

Men of Mugs’bro’, show your mettle,

Let them see that you’re in fettle!

Once for all this question settle

Sweater shall Prevail!

* * *

Every now and then some of these poor wretches—they were all paid speakers—were surrounded and savagely mauled and beaten by a hostile crowd. If they were Tariff Reformers the Liberals mobbed them, and vice versa. Lines of rowdies swaggered to and fro, arm in arm, singing, ‘Vote, Vote, Vote, for good ole Closeland’ or ‘good ole Sweater’, according as they were green or blue and yellow. Gangs of hooligans paraded up and down, armed with sticks, singing, howling, cursing and looking for someone to hit. Others stood in groups on the pavement with their hands thrust in their pockets, or leaned against walls or the shutters of the shops with expressions of ecstatic imbecility on their faces, chanting the mournful dirge to the tune of the church chimes,



Good—ole—Sweat—er

Good—ole—Sweat—er

Good—ole—Sweat—er

Good—ole—Sweat—er.

* * *

Ch 54. The End

Rushton having concluded his address, Didlum stepped forward to give out the words of the hymn the former had quoted at the conclusion of his remarks:



Oh, come and jine this ‘oly band,

And hon to glory go.

Strange and incredible as it may appear to the reader, although none of them ever did any of the things Jesus said, the people who were conducting this meeting had the effrontery to claim to be followers of Christ— Christians!

Jesus said: ‘Lay not up for yourselves treasure upon earth’, ‘Love not the world nor the things of the world’, ‘Woe unto you that are rich—it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven.’ Yet all these self-styled ‘Followers’ of Christ made the accumulation of money the principal business of their lives.

Jesus said: ‘Be ye not called masters; for they bind heavy burdens and grievous to be borne, and lay them on men’s shoulders, but they themselves will not touch them with one of their fingers. For one is your master, even Christ, and ye are all brethren.’ But nearly all these alleged followers of the humble Workman of Nazareth claimed to be other people’s masters or mistresses. And as for being all brethren, whilst most of these were arrayed in broadcloth and fine linen and fared sumptuously every day, they knew that all around them thousands of those they hypocritically called their ‘brethren’, men, women and little children, were slowly perishing of hunger and cold; and we have already seen how much brotherhood existed between Sweater and Rushton and the miserable, half-starved wretches in their employment.

Whenever they were asked why they did not practise the things Jesus preached, they replied that it is impossible to do so! They did not seem to realize that when they said this they were saying, in effect, that Jesus taught an impracticable religion; and they appeared to forget that Jesus said, ‘Wherefore call ye me Lord, Lord, when ye do not the things I say?…’ ‘Whosoever heareth these sayings of mine and doeth them not, shall be likened to a foolish man who built his house upon the sand.’



TWC

Solidarity with the Workers

 It is not the first time, nor will it be the last that the government, whether Tory or Labour,  has used the military to break a strike.


 1,200 members of the military and 1,000 civil servants are to be drafted in to cover for striking ambulance and Border Force staff over Christmas.


Sara Gorton, Unison’s head of health, warned, “The military’s no substitute for trained ambulance staff as the government knows. The hours spent on contingency planning could have been better used trying to prevent the strikes from taking place.”


Paul O’Connor, the PCS union’s head of bargaining, said the military have “better things to do” than passport control.

“They are not sufficiently trained to carry out this role and they shouldn’t be put in this invidious position when they should be enjoying the festive break with their families,” he said. “The same applies to civil servants who are being pulled in from elsewhere, also leaving their jobs uncovered.

“Instead of throwing good money after bad trying to desperately mask the effectiveness of our industrial action, the government should put a serious offer on the table to deal with the cost-of-living crisis that they have created for their own workforce.”

Military not ‘sufficiently trained’ to cover NHS strikes, unions say | NHS | The Guardian




BUSINESS PROFITS FROM PROFITS

  



How do official figures showing wage rises averaging 6% – well below the 10.7% consumer prices index? 

How does pay settlement data, which tracks the big deals offered this year by major employers across the public and private sectors, reveal a trigger for runaway prices when it shows those deals average just 4%?

There are hundreds of products in the shops that have benefited from falling shipping costs, lower raw materials costs and labour costs yet prices continue to climb.

Paul Donovan, chief economist at UBS Global Wealth Management, has analysed the situation in America, where more detailed information about the corporate sector is available. He examined the rise in wage costs across the hotel sector, adjusted for productivity since the end of 2019, and found it was between 5% and 6%. Restaurant and hotel prices had risen 16%. Donovan found hotel operators were using fewer staff to improve productivity, limiting the impact of wage rises. This rise in efficiency was being channelled to shareholders, not consumers, who were fed a story that prices needed to rise to cope with rising wage bills.

 Corporations in the US made quarterly profits of almost $3tn in the three months to the end of September, up from $2.4tn two years earlier and an average $2tn in the eight years before the pandemic.

Analysis by the Unite union of Britain’s largest 350 companies revealed a similar trend – profit margins were 73% higher in 2021 than 2019. “Even though sales were down in 2021, profits still rocketed,” said the union’s general secretary, Sharon Graham. “Even removing energy companies from the tally, average profit margins still jumped an astonishing 52%.”

It’s not pay claims that are driving up prices in Britain. It’s profits | Phillip Inman | The Guardian