For some reason
yesterday, I remembered Miklos. He’d had a fairly normal, average life. And
then he met Deon. Deon was a charlatan, a poseur, the worst kind of snake oil
pedlar, who flatters his intended with compliments praising their intelligence,
their capacity for thought, their perceptiveness. He claimed to have some kind
of knowledge of higher thought process, of a kind of enlightenment he would
share with you if he thought you worthy enough. Or gullible enough (he didn’t
try it on me). A dangerous man.
Every time Miklos got
drunk or stoned (fairly frequently), he would start to gaze wide-eyed around
him and say, wonderingly, ‘Now… I see it… I see it all… What is here… What we
are…’ On being pressed to explain, Miklos and Deon would smile ruefully, shake
their heads sadly, say in tones of sorrow ‘You won’t get it. You don’t get it.
You don’t know what the truth is.’ Dangerous words.
Dangerous because it made
Deon’s followers believe themselves to know ‘the truth’. They ‘got it’, we
didn’t. We were poor, hopeless, blinkered saps, trundling along, eyes fixed on
the road beneath our feet, not stopping to question things, blindly accepting.
Whereas they were beyond all that. They were superior.
Superiority is a strange
way of feeling about other people. I don’t like it. It paints the world as
being unequal, the ones who know at the top, the rest of us below. A bit like
the way conspiracy theorists think. A bit like the way UKIP supporters believe.
I had a run in with a
UKIP supporter on here a few months ago. They took exception to a throwaway
comment I made about ‘a swivel eyed UKIP supporter’ and took me to task for it.
Unfortunately their opening salvo was posted not on the piece where I’d used
the phrase, but on a short story instead. Here you go:
I may have been a bit of
a tit in my responses, but what struck me most was the tone of his (I’m
assuming it was a male UKIP supporter for some reason) words. The overwhelming
sense of superiority. The ‘You don’t like UKIP, therefore you have no common
sense, you don’t know what the truth is, you must love lefty lentil weaving neo
Marxist EU whores. Oh, and have an insult to your mental health too.’ I clearly
really annoyed them, because my blog stats showed they hung out on here for
over 24 hours after their first comment.
And I was thinking,
yesterday (‘steady!’, I hear you cry) and I realised that’s the appeal of UKIP.
Just as Deon manipulated Miklos and others into believing he had access to the ‘truth’,
so UKIP flatter their intended targets.
A lot of people who say
they’re voting UKIP say they’re doing it as a protest. I understand where
they’re coming from. We live in an age where career politicians have their
noses in the trough, are groomed and polished, resolutely on message. They
represent us, but they are not representative of us. We feel increasingly
disenfranchised and unengaged with politics. So it’s tempting to a party that
appears to have a bit of personality, that seems to get it, that isn’t
po-faced. They smile lots, they drink beer, they talk about returning to common
sense, and they tell opposing politicians ‘we all know what’s going on here.’
So the UKIP supporters
preen, and think to themselves ‘I’m not like non UKIPers. I can see beyond the
surface. I know the TRUTH!’ It’s dangerous. Because once UKIP have fooled people
into believing that they genuinely admire their supporters, the supporters will follow UKIP slavishly.
They become more than mere supporters. They become devotees. So when it’s
pointed out to UKIPers that actually, if you do a bit of digging behind the smiley
mask of UKIP, the real face is a pretty nasty, intolerant, misogynist, racist
sneer, they feel they are being personally attacked. ‘But I am none of those
things! How dare you? It’s true what Nigel says! You’re scared that we know
what the truth is, and you’re smearing us!’ Then they retreat to the bunker, an
enemy to logic.
It’s easy to mock UKIP
supporters. Easy, and quite a lot of fun. But now I’m starting to think it’s
actually the most dangerous thing we can do. Because it plays completely into
their hands. When we mock them, we dismiss them; hence we reinforce their
belief in the truth of UKIP, and the fact that we’re too blind to see it. And
UKIP embraces them, it hugs them to its breast, it smoothes their hair and
tells them ‘Don’t worry. We know we’re right.’ And subtly, it pulls them
closer, and more aligned with UKIP. This is the smiling, friendly face of
British extremism, subtly fanning the fears and worries and divisions. Michael
Rosen put it far more eloquently than I could:
I sometimes fear that
people think that fascism arrives in fancy dress worn by grotesques and
monsters as played out in endless re-runs of the Nazis. Fascism arrives as your
friend. It will restore your honour, make you feel proud, protect your house,
give you a job, clean up the neighbourhood, remind you of how great you once
were, clear out the venal and the corrupt, remove anything you feel is unlike
you...It doesn't walk in saying, "Our programme means militias, mass
imprisonments, transportations, war and persecution."
We’re sleepwalking towards
extremism. And mocking the extremists makes them stronger.
5 comments:
Fantastic blog ;-)
Thank you! I think there's plenty more to write about this...
Have you ever thought about becoming a freelance writer? You are really good. I don't think of myself as a political person but I can totally understand your point of view - is UKIP as to the BNP as Sinn Fein is to the IRA??
Wonderfully written, as always! I particularly liked reading your responses to the UKIP guy. BTW, I have a lazy eye so I really am 'swivel-eyed'. Also, probably a pompous arse to boot.
Sam, that is kind of it, although both parties would deny it. UKIP seems to be becoming the acceptable face of intolerance and veiled racism. It sickens me.
Lottie, I was enjoying myself! I just loved how he kicked off by commenting on the wrong post... And I bet your arse is as peachy and delightful as mine x
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