26 June 2011

Behind the picket line.

There are many occasions in life that find me enthusiastically screaming and shouting until my voice is hoarse. But only one that is done so naked. The others tend to involve me hurling various obscenities from a muddy sideline and/or pub stool, drunkenly caterwauling my way through some rock anthem whilst holding onto a confused stranger for dear life, or attempting to get the attention of a long-fantasised-over rock star amid a crowd of several thousand knickerless ladies who have all had the same idea. Quite frankly, I embarrassingly lose any remaining self respect or inhibitions and throw myself full force (l nearly wrote full frontal, a Freudian slip if ever there was one) into the moment.


You would think, then, that political marches, tree-top living, oil-tanker ambushes and the like would be right up my street. All that banner waving, chanting and general raucous behaviour should really appeal to someone of my  antagonistic nature. But it doesn't. Not in any way. In fact, whenever I happen to chance upon a march of any sort I hot foot it in the other direction. Apart from the time when I ended up heading a procession in Seville. In a car. In 35 degree heat. Police were banging on the windows, protesters were attempting to tie banners onto the wipers, and, I, fearing for my life and attempting to mime a wrong turn, ended up half suffocated by a map. Not my finest moment.

My general antipathy towards protests, however, does not prevent me from joining the masses when l feel it is required. I just avoid the chanting, refuse to wave a banner, and generally get through the whole ordeal with a flask of whisky. Marching against the Iraq War - TICK. Marching against the hike in University Fees - TICK. Marching against the changes to Teacher's Pensions - I remain undecided.

School is currently a political hotbed, with groups of teachers huddled on the corners of every corridor, rumours of strikes, tactical union membership changes, and the possibility of school closure fuelling every heated whispered debate. The militant protesters are on the hunt for new recruits, and are zealously evangelical about the horrors of the coalition government, placing hand drawn posters of the Education Minister as Satan with the Prime Minister as one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse in everyone's desk. One such vigilante appeared in my classroom with fire in his eyes as he spouted the Law According to NUT. He left a couple of minutes later with posters staple-gunned to his nipples. Much to my pupils' amusement.

I think it may be the hours of my childhood that were spent listening intently as a preacher after preacher proclaimed the Word of the Lord, Death to all Sinners, and How Tambourine Playing Saves Your Soul. It could be that I was forced to spend my Saturdays performing badly choreographed dance routines in the street to entice more foul-souled shoppers to redeem themselves the following Sunday morning. Perhaps it is the days spent memorising whole sections of the Bible ( I still know Psalm 1 by heart, should it ever appear on Who Wants to Be A Millionaire), or that I spent a weekend hiking in horizontal rain carrying a chicken that subsequently caught pneumonia and whose neck l had to then attempt to break with a log, or that l frequently got my mouth washed out with soap if l so much as tapped my foot to 'Like a Virgin'. Whatever the cause, try to convert me and you will find that I stand there with my fingers stuck in my ears, shouting 'Anarchy in the UK' approximately 0.5cm from your eardrum. And a leaflet staple-gunned to an intimate part of your anatomy.

Instead, l prefer to come to my own conclusions. I like to know all the information, and take a balanced approach. So l have read a lot this weekend, formulating arguments, and deciding what my plan of action will be for the week ahead. As l delved into the labyrinthine tunnels of information that the internet holds, l stumbled across all the Bills that Parliament are currently debating. There are the usual suspects - Education, Welfare Reform, Asylum Seekers, but there are some anomalies. Ones that have not reached the headlines, for reasons that will become apparent.

1.) That the Royal Mint should produce commemorative coins for the Olympics that weigh 1 Kilogram. Is this a subtle ploy to win the war against obesity, to succeed where Jamie Oliver has failed by filling the pockets of the nation with overweight coinage? Nonsense. They need to produce commemorative coins that can only be used when you have collected all five parts from your box of cereal, and stuck them altogether with super glue.

2.) That people who have removed or attempted to remove snow from public places are immune from prosecution. I am not sure how clearing snow could be construed as a criminal offence, unless you had access to a snow plough and destroyed several neighbour's gardens and flattened a pet llama in the process, and l am not sure what unfortunate event would have led to an M.P realising that the law still existed. However, I, for one, am in favour. I suspect that being arrested and convicted for clearing a snow drift would hold no kudos in the prison system.

3.) That local bowling greens should be protected from local redevelopment. Obviously put forward by someone who enjoys spending an evening bleaching and starching white trousers to within an inch of their lives, and then donning them to roll a few balls about on a small piece of grass that has been trimmed with nail scissors by a member of the local OCD help group. Build a house on it.  Look at the French, all they need is a bit of gravel and a bottle of red wine to enjoy their ball rolling.


So there we have it. One one hand, our government are sailing our pensions down the river, on the other, they are saving our bowling greens. I suppose we should be grateful for small mercies. Now, where is that picket line again?

9 comments:

  1. My last rally was when we camped outside the Police HQ for arresting a fellow journalist under the Internal Security bullshit for something she wrote a few years back. She was released after a couple of days.

    There is another one coming up next week, where people are hoping to reform the electoral rules. Quite controversial, that one.

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  2. You have good instincts. Unlike wearing no knickers, getting angry is bad for the health. You're probably too young to be fussed about pensions in any case.

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  3. Jaya J - See, I think those are the things worth protesting about. I would definitely be with you there. Paying more money into something which will get to recoup at the end of my working life is not, l feel.

    GB - Indeed. Fresh air is definitely good for the soul. Although l think the appearance of several grey hairs this year may indicate l should think about old age in terms more serious than a closet of slippers.

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  4. The beauty of protesting protests is that you can do it quite eloquently (and comfortably) from a sofa. Sign me up.

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  5. Nice post. I would however like to protest the attrocious clothing that is worn by those bizarre creatures that frequent the Walmart zoo. Then again, the images of such creatures certainly do bring a bit of laughter to one's day.

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  6. One fine day you should come along with me while we stroll among the throngs of protestors who waltz through the scorching heat of a DC summer just to tell you about the plight of hairless cats.
    They cross boldly against the light and take up all the free parking with their large colorfully decorated cars.

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  7. A Beer for the Shower: Yes, l too am a fan of protest-by-sofa, although protest-by-bed is my favourite.

    The Empress: I am with you there. There should be an anti-bare-chest-in-the-supermarket protest every summer. Who wants to be in close proximity to sweaty hairy toasted flesh when purchasing their dinner? Not l.

    Dufmanno: Bastards. Just getting in everyone's way and making a nuisance of themselves. I would be tempted to shave their heads in a form of anti-protest protest.

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  8. I can just see it now, "Oi love, what you in for?" *deathly silence* "Ahem... snow shoveling".

    :)

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  9. I don't think you're alone in your apathy. Nobody seems to care about much of anything these days, myself included. I hate that soldiers are sent off to die for poorly guided wars, but I don't care quite enough to lose my job from an arrest.

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