A
few hundred years ago, a gang of fiendishly clever engineers in
Shropshire came up with an invention which turned the course of
history. Basically everything that could line up, lined up.
Their new creation was a new amalgam of metals which changed the game in a big
way. Using the new metallic mix, they were able to manufacture extra large cooking pots which
wouldn't break apart when subjected to intense heat. These pots made it suddenly possible to knock up a bubbling stew for fifty plus diners on a
roaring camp fire.
OK.
Does't seem like such a big deal, right? I mean a cooking pot is
hardly Apollo 11 or the Iphone.
Patience
dear reader, patience.
So
here's what everything lining up looked like.
In
the years before the Shropshire boys made their metallic breakthrough, a couple of big things had happened.
Number
one. The European nations had discovered a bunch of islands in the
sun in the 'New World' which were perfectly suited to growing sugar
cane. Sugar was right up there with gold as a way to get seriously
rich. Europe was collectively developing a sweet tooth and we
couldn't get enough of the sweet stuff.
But
there were all kinds of problems to overcome. The islands in the sun
were pretty much uninhabited. So there was no labour force and growing,
harvesting and processing sugar cane was seriously labour intensive.
To start with, the wannabe sugar barons reached for an old play book. They
lobbied the King and said come on Jimmy, help us out here. We need a
bunch of slaves to harvest sugar and we'll cut you in with a nice fat
slice of the action if you can provide us with some warm bodies in
shackles.
Unsurprisingly England was at war with Ireland and
Scotland at the time and England was winning. Victory in battle meant
claiming a bunch of the defeated army's soldiers as spoils of war. Lots of
these Scottish and Irish soldiers were duly sold off into slavery and stuck on ships
bound for the Caribbean. A new word was coined.
Transportation
was called 'being Barbadoed'.
So.
Sorted then.
Well,
actually no.
The
Scots and the Irish found working out in the burning sun to be a tad problematic. They started dropping like flies. Shirking bastards.
No work in them. A lousy return on investment.
So
the sugar boys started looking around for a plan B.
And they found
one.
The
Europeans at this time had made another game changing discovery. A
new place called West Africa where tribal chiefs were more
than happy to trade slaves in return for the kind of European goodies they
couldn't buy at home. Early trials in the sugar fields were more than
encouraging. These black fellas couldn't half put in a shift under
the burning sun. In fact they worked like niggers. They offered a hell
of a return on capital.
But
filling a ship with slaves wasn't easy. In the early days, a few shiny beads were enough to light up the eyes of a chief with a bunch of slaves to
trade. But this honeymoon period soon passed and the bar kept on
getting higher.
And in
the these early days, the English mainly came second best to the
French, Spanish and Portuguese when it came to closing the deal. They
really didn't anything much to offer.
Until
the Shropshire engineers did their thing.
And
absolutely everything changed.
The
new cooking bowls were forged in Ironbridge.
Which
is on the River Severn.
Which
meant it was easy to sail the pots down to Bristol.
Which
was a busy port ready and capable of loading up those pots and
shipping them down to West Africa.
And
the chiefs couldn't get enough of the new cooking pots. I mean they REALLY couldn't get enough of them. All of a sudden the French,
Spanish and Portuguese had nothing to compete with the indestructible Ironbridge pots which were soon an absolutely must have item for any
self respecting West African chief.
And
within a few short years England became the top dog in the slavery game.
Millions of Africans were shipped across the Atlantic. Vast fortunes were made. Great
oceans of cash were desperate to find a home. I mean, come on. There
are only so many National Trust ready country piles you can build. So
the oceans of cash enabled the creation of a banking sector which
over the years morphed into the City of London. And the spare cash became venture capital which poured into a whole bunch of new
inventions like spinning wheels and steam trains.
As
in the first Industrial Revolution, which in turn provided the ships
and artillery pieces and bayonets to enable plucky little Britain to
go forth and conquer a quarter of the world.
So.
Like I said. Those 'must have' metal pots were one hell of a game
changer and countless millions of people paid a heavy price for three
hundred long years.
And
the memory of how it all started wasn't lost on the Lords and Masters
in London. If you can find the right trinket, you can get the natives
to do pretty much anything you want them to do. They will dance to
any tune you play them.
Three
hundred years of Empire saw endless variations on this particular
theme. Probably the most successful was the 'opium for tea' scam we
pulled on the Chinese. It was pretty simple really. You grow a bunch of
poppies in India and turn them into smokeable opium. Then you punt it
out to the Chinese. Cheap as chips. Affordable to one and all. Then, once you have got tens of millions of them well and truly hooked, you
jack the price up a few hundred percent and of course like any group
of hopeless addicts, they will do literally anything for their next
fix. Like selling tea for less than cost. Like granting a 150 year
lease on the island of Hong Kong.
But
all good things come to an end.
The
twentieth century saw the end of the time of trinkets. Most of the
one time suckers found they were more than capable of making their
own trinkets. They decided enough was enough and the British Empire
imploded.
And
now here we are. London is down to a miserable handful of colonies.
Dreams of Empire might still be strong, but the ability to go forth
and conquer has completely disappeared.
To
make matter s worse, the natives in the London's money spinning colony
are getting increasingly uppity. The people of Scotland are preparing
to join the club of sixty countries who have freed themselves from
London Rule. It is a club upon which the sun never sets.
The
membership form is all filled in and sponsors have been found.
And
the lords and masters in London are scrambling to find a way to stop
it.
The
days when London new exactly the right trinkets and baubles to settle
uppity natives are long gone.
But
old habits die hard.
And
so it was last week when London's Clown King took to the airwaves to
offer us something shiny as a bribe to stay in the shrunken Empire.
As
shiny baubles go it was pretty crap. A tunnel from Stranraer to
Northern Ireland.
Aye
right.
I
mean, come on.
Does
anyone seriously think it will ever happen?
And
does anyone actually want it?
Does
the Clown King seriously think we are so tragically gullible? Maybe he
actually does? Or maybe it is just yet another desperate ploy to
dodge the bullets of a bad news day?
But
here's the thing which makes this possibly the worst bauble the
Empire has ever tried to peddle.
Talk of a tunnel means some
engineering realities. As in what are the conditions on the bed of
the Irish Sea like?
And these pesky questions shine a light on some pretty ugly secrets which London would do
well to keep hidden as far as possible from the public view.
You
see at the end of both of the twentieth century's world wars, Britain
was left with a whole bunch of nasty munitions to deal with.
We're
talking the worst of stuff here. Volatile high explosive. Shells
stuffed with chemical weapons. The sort of stuff you want well away
from where you live. I mean seriously, not the kind of tackle you
would want anywhere near the Cotswolds.
Well
this is the reason you have colonies, right?
They offer the perfect
place to get rid of your toxic waste. And a few miles off the
Galloway coast is a geological feature which goes by the name
Beaufort's Dyke.
Thirty
miles long, two miles wide and 1000 feet deep. The perfect place to
dump all your toxic, poisonous shit. Out of sight and out of mind, right?
Colonies
have their uses and thousands of tonnes of nastiness was duly tipped into Beaufort's Dyke.
And
in the 50's they tossed in a bunch of cement wrapped nuclear waste.
Just for luck I guess.
And
now the Clown King is proposing digging a tunnel through this
particular Devil's brew.
Aye
right.
As
baubles go, this has to be the least shiny ever presented as a
hopeful bribe. As baubles go, this is utterly pathetic.
As
is the Clown King.
As
is the shriveled excuse of an Empire he rules.
Enough
already!