Friday 17 August 2012

On Bread and Games



                Hello. We live in a democracy: a society wherein government rules only by the consent of the people who have the right to demand certain things from their rulers and throw them out of power if they deem those in power haven’t looked after their interests. I know, it’s terrible, isn’t it? Eugh, people getting a say in the fate of their own countries, yuk. This is not a good idea because, as anyone who’s been to a Weatherspoons on Curry Thursday can tell you, people are scum. They’re also sorely in need of a few elocution lessons, but that’s a topic for a different set of poorly-researched, opinions masquerading as an article. Today I’m concerning myself with how to minimise the damage this whole “Right of Nations to Self-Determination” thing can do to the plans of an aspiring oligarch.
                I recommend oligarchy rather than monarchy to solve our country’s problem with mob rule because there’s a lot of work involved in manipulating the fate of nations to suit one’s own needs; it is a complex and time-consuming exercise which will be made much easier with colleagues. The other reason is that the existing governmental system is one with power in several hands so by having a cabal rule your people by your side you can maintain a facade of not changing things too dramatically; this will allow you to strengthen your grip on the reins of power before anyone realises what you are doing. So, you will need a group you can trust to follow instructions. You either need people with shared goals and philosophy or some on whom you have some dirt which can be used to blackmail them. I advocate the latter because ideals might change when a person is given power, but blackmail will only become a more potent means of control once they are in the public eye.
                You will no doubt want to rush straight off to pull down the great pillars of your society and tear up its foundations to make room for your new solid gold swimming pool, but if you want to succeed hold on a minute. Grinding down the institutions of a people to make gravel for your driveway takes longer than one might thing – Rome’s constitution wasn’t irrevocably altered in a day, as they say – so you’ll need some sort of fig leaf or mandate to hide behind while you’re working. I recommend blaming the previous rulers. Whether you’re pretending to restore republican morality or tackle a deficit, you will be thankful for the ability to say “Well, I’m sorry, but this wouldn’t be necessary if they hadn’t messed things up quite so badly. Now bend over, bite the pillow and take your medicine. Oh, you like your medicine, don’t you? You need your medicine because you’re a sick society in need of reform, aren’t you? Oh, take the medicine! Take it! If you stop clenching then we can all be in THIS together, too!” Practice this sort of phrase and remember to vary it; you’ll seem far from genuine if you just repeat the same catch-phrase verbatim each time you’re challenged.
                This is quite enough for your to-do list for now, so I’ll leave you here. I don’t want to blind you with science and in any case I have a date with a bottle of gin. Don’t be scared if it seems like a lot of work, it’s all necessary to get the changes you see as being necessary. But in the interest of balance I will tell you that you can affect these changes another way. You can properly engage with the current imperfect system, organise your peers and lobby your representatives to actually earn their salary, constantly reminding them of problems and what you think needs changing, tell them they’ll lose your vote if they fundamentally change the health service, for example. I didn’t say the alternative method of changing society was any easier, did I? In any case, you’d better get cracking on finding the darkest secrets of your soon-to-be colleagues in office, or writing to your MP or whatever. If you don’t get started soon some other group with educated accents and shiny faces and vast wealth will get in and dismantle the country to suit the interests of their friends.
                Oh? They already have? Hmm. Well in that case make yourself a bacon sarnie, stick on “The Apprentice” and accept your fate like a good little subject. Pan ludique are all we, the ruled classes, really need anyway, innit?

One hopes you're well,
Yrs,
ADWoodward

Monday 6 August 2012

The Song of the Fallen Queen

Hello. Terribly sorry I've not put anything up here for a little while; I was in the Caribbean. It was a lovely holiday, but this post has nothing to do with that. I thought I'd share with you another thing that was the basis for song lyrics for the play what I was in. this one is based on Euripides' Hecuba. It goes thusly:


The Song of the Fallen Queen


She is a mother and instinct is mighty;
It drove her in her offspring’s best interest,
Like the she-bear with her mountain-side rages.
When one’s child is threatened one’s brain disengages;
No logic, no calm analysis.
Pure action, driven by fear of paralysis.
Doing nothing has grave consequences
For her and her bundle of joy.
When her daughter or her little boy
Needs her she’ll pay no heed to logic,
Or safety, or the binding decorum of man-made laws.
For she knows the high price of the slightest pause:
The life of a child,
Her child.
Not moving, nor smiling, nor screaming, or crying
But still.
Dreadfully still.
And cold.
But if maternal instinct fails her
There’s one thought left to save her:
Punish the infanticide.
That might still the screams inside.
The heart-piercing note of a terrified child
Begging the feminine sentinel to appear
And say “It’s okay now, don’t cry, mummy’s here”
And make the hurting stop
And make them go away
And make everything alright again.
But it won’t ever be alright again.
She’ll never hold her child again.
And that is why she hurt the men
Who tore out her still-beating heart.
Foolish in naïveté
She believed them when they promised sweetly
That they would look after her child,
That they would stand in loco parentis,
And stand guard after her farewell kiss.
But they didn’t.
And now the rage has faded,
And her battle-lust is sated,
She stands by a photograph
Of an eight-year child old caught mid-laugh
And she knows –
More than anything she’s known before or since
That despite her just and cunning revenge
It will never be alright again.


One hopes you're well,
yrs,
ADWoodward