Sunday 5 February 2012

We've only just begun

Now I am pretty sure that was the first line of a Carpenters song in the 70's, and was probably about the commencement of a new relationship or something equally slushy (as I am sure I thought at the time). It also is true if the Guardian can be believed true of another relationship. According to an article last week by Polly Toynbee (who still gets ribbed by her call for readers to vote Lib Dem in the Election of 2010), we are also at the start of something else, another less welcome relationship. A relationship with Austerity. According to her article only 6% of actual public sector cuts planned have yet occurred. thats right readers, only 6%. Now there was no citing of sources, no references (Geneva or Harvard), so maybe she got it wrong. Say for arguments sake she's out by 300%, so  approximately 20% of projected cuts have occurred.
With a public sector payfreeze and an expensive reorganisation (marketisation) of the NHS occurring then what does this hold out for us? I wager its a bit more serious than the chatterati camping outside their Libraries in North London or indeed twice weekly bin collections.What will it actually look like? How we can envisage a rolling back of services at such a scale? How will it look in the sleepy hamlet where I live. Well mabe the libary is at risk, maybe the local schools will miss out on maintenance, day services for the vulnerable, or possibly a lessening presence  of police. Could be rubbish collection, street cleaning, or public amenities will start charging like parking at the beach . Small stuff maybe, but an eroding feeling, public morale can be vulnerable to such an approach.
To push through this we all need a belief that it can be endured, that we can tolerate the hardships (bit like winter really), and that maybe its in some way tolerable because its inevitable or even fair (just like winter).
So is this approach fair , tolerable or even something that the ordinanry citizen has caused and should pay for? If the answer is no then where will the feeling of injustice go? Here in the UK the usual pattern is to internalise distress , that could mean calls for help to  services that no longer exist. It really has only just begun.

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