I had made up my mind not
to vote in today's Referendum. In fact I went public about the
decision in this very blog. To be honest, I just couldn't stand the
thought of voting for either side. Every time I heard the 'Remainers' predicting plagues of locusts it took me straight back to the
poisoned, lying words of 'Better Together'. But 'Vote Leave' is no
'Yes'. Instead of smiling hope and enthusiasm it has been a snarling, scowl of bitter insularity and barely disguised racism.
So I decided not to vote at all.
I received a long and convincing reply in the comments section of the
page from Ian who rightly reminded me the least I should do is
turn up at the ballot box to spoil my paper. Fair enough. Too many
good men and women have laid down their lives for my right to visit the ballot box for me to stay away. Cheers for that Ian.
But now the day has arrived and I've changed my mind. I will be putting a cross in the box that says
'Remain' with no enthusiasm whatsoever.
Why?
There have been a couple
of things. I had already made my decision before watching Sheila
Hancock's magnificent contribution on last night's Channel 4 debate.
If I hadn't already been off the fence, Sheila would have definitely
knocked me off my sulking perch. Clean off. I don't know if it is up on YouTube yet, but it will be soon enough and it is the finest speech I have heard in
years. I guess it helps when the person speaking the words is a
trained actor with sixty years experience, but bloody hell! Wow.
The main reason for my
change of heart was a sudden memory from the desperate days following
the defeat of the 'Yes' dream back in 2014. I remembered reading the
statistics describing how the generations had voted. The young had
overwhelmingly hitched their wagons to optimism and hope. In fact
right up to the age of 60 the people of Scotland had voted 'Yes'. But
the dream was trodden down by the over sixties who were having none
of it.
I took to my keyboard and wrote a blog which was little more than a howl of rage and anguish. Within a few hours over 10,000 readers turned up to share the pain. It all just felt so wrong.
And now it looks like it's happening again. 70%
of young people want their future to be in a land that looks out on the world with
a smile and welcomes strangers. 70% of old people want to slam the
door shut and pretend it is possible to return to a Faragian myth of
the 1950's.
I reckon this generation
of old people has to be the most selfish there has ever been.
Instinctively I feel apart from them but I guess I probably should
admit to myself that at 55 years old I am more or less a part of
them.
How much do these people
want? They are quite literally the luckiest people in our country's
history. They have lived through a golden era we will never see
again. All their lives they have known a free health service and free
education. When they went to university, it was all paid for by the
tax payer. They bought houses for a few hundred pounds in the 1960's
and watched them turn into treasure troves. They have never been
asked to go to war and they have seen the price of food crash by 80%.
When they were young they consumed the joys of the 'Swinging Sixties'
when all the basics of life were cheap as chips and more or less
everyone who wanted a job had a job. And now millions of them enjoy
the kind of final salary pensions that will never see the light
again.
And yet nothing is ever
enough. Every election sees the over 65s more or less blackmail politicians
into putting them first. Medical science has ensured there are more
over 65's than there have ever been before. And do they ever
appreciate their electoral power! They know the silver haired vote is
all conquering. No party dares to stand up to the militants with the
disabled parking badges.
Gimme, gimme, gimme....
Gimme, gimme, gimme....
Or else....
Triple locked pensions and
pension tax credits and a winter fuel allowance and free TV licences
and free bus passes...... Never mind that most of these guys are sitting
on a bricks and mortar fortune and get a monthly pension most young
people working fifty hard hours a week can only dream of earning.
And how have all these
nasty election bribes been paid for? On the backs of the young of
course. Where else? The poor sods who are now weighed down to the
tune of £30,000 when they work hard for a degree. The poor sods who
are priced off the housing ladder forever. The poor sods who are
charged £1500 a year for insurance when they pass their driving
test. The poor sods who have been slowly but surely priced out of
all the things that the silver haired generation used to take for
granted. Like a night in the pub. Like going to the match. Like
filling the tank with petrol.
A third of everything our
country produces goes to keeping the older generation in the style it
has become accustomed to. I heard a telling phrase the other day.
Today's young are the 'Pack Horse Generation'. They are expected to pay
for everything and they get nothing in return.
What makes the way the
younger generation are being treated doubly sickening is the fact
that they are so ridiculously commendable. 25% of 18 to 25's are now
T total. Guess where we now find the vast majority of problematic
binge drinkers who cost the NHS £35,000 a year when their livers are
all shot to hell? You got it. The over 65's. Over recent years
teenage pregnancy statistics have fallen off a cliff at the same time
as the over 50's have accounted for a steep rise in sexually
transmitted diseases. When it comes to getting completely pissed and
having unprotected sex the young have a great deal to teach the old!
Bloody ridiculous isn't it.
You would think these sweeteners, bribes and goodies would
be enough for the oldies. Fat chance. Nothing is ever enough. Their
sense of entitlement beggars belief. And now they are doing their
best to smash yet more of the hopes and aspirations of those who pay
all the bills. Oh yeah, today is threatening to be IndyRef revisted.
I do not pretend to share
the enthusiasm the younger generation shows for the EU. To be honest
I think they are a tad naive. But hell, it is their future when all is said and done, not mine.
Democracy should mean they have a proper chance of the future they
choose. It isn't my future. And it certainly isn't a future that
belongs to the over 65's. How dare they dig in their embittered heels
and deprive the young of the what they want? And why? Because they
heard someone speaking Polish in the Post Office? Because Mrs Rogers
reckons house prices on the street will have dropped when that Pakistani family moved into number 37? Because the Lithuanian girl in
Asda couldn't understand a simple question about where the sellotape
could be found?
It sucked in September
2014 and it sucks now. The bitter oldies slapped down the dream of
'Yes' and now they want to drag us all behind the walls of a moaning, xenophobic, permanently grumpy Little
England. When a vote is all about what the next fifty years will look like, I would love
to see a very different voting system.
Something like this.
Something like this.
Under thirties get 3 votes
each. Those between 30 and 60 get two votes and the over 60s get one.
It would mean that those who will be living the future will have the
biggest say in how it should look. Of course the silver haired
brigade will be involved in some of the future and so they should be
allowed some of the say. But only some.
So what the hell. I'm
getting down with the kids. Fair enough, the EU doesn't ring my bell
much but if that's what they want, then they should be allowed to have
it. Christ knows they get bugger all else.
As a 67 year old Yesser, I worry that the emphasis on the over-60s is not based on fact, but purely a divide and conquer tactic of the anti-democracy brigade. To determine accurately the age of the voter, the ballot paper would need to be cross-checked with the register list at the individual polling station, and then further cross-checked with the census data to get an approximation of the age, then with the Registrars to find a date of birth. This whole process to be repeated for 17% of voters to arrive at the final total. It is going to be a long night.
ReplyDeleteI can recognise your angst. I'm 63 but definitely identify with younger age groups. However, the majority of over 60's are not rolling in disposable income. Therefore, whilst acknowledging "where you're coming from" I despair when divide and rule comes to the fore.
ReplyDeleteIf you're 55 now, you'll be in the "older" demographic in 10 years. Perhaps you should ponder on the fact that you will be voting the correct way (unless you become the cantankerous old sot you're referring to just now) in a short decade. The future looks rosy, wouldn't you agree?
ReplyDelete