My Theory On The Great Conspiracy Theory Conspiracy

I’m getting close to a stage where I can fully explain the reasons for my “Clearing The Premises” title, but not before I give a bit of background to my (possibly warped) philosophy.  This week I’m dealing with a particular pet peeve of mine.

No doubt the net result of having what we consider to be “trust issues” is bad.  At some stage we have to allow ourselves to have at least a little faith in those around us otherwise there would be no point in getting out of bed in the morning, assuming of course you had enough trust in the bed manufacturers to get into the thing in the first place.

But in this blog post I wish to do mankind and valuable service by reclaiming the proper definition of the term “conspiracy theory”.

As the great Dr House often said, (which of course means it must be true) “everybody lies”.  It is a fact of life.  Our inability as a race to actually read people’s thoughts has made it engrained in our DNA to try and deceive people, whether it be to swindle enormous amounts of cash or just to make people think their shoe is untied so they can look down.

And once the nature of a lie is both shared and agreed upon with another person, it becomes a conspiracy.  The word doesn’t have to mean something of Watergate proportions.

Naturally, as with every topic you care to discuss, there are extremes.  When it comes to trust, at one end you have people who are willing to put their full faith into everything they are told, while at the other, you have those who think their microwave is trying to convince them to worship the devil.

Somehow over the course of time, the term “conspiracy theory” has come to mean something that must indicate you are leaning towards the latter, “tin-foil hat” category.  “Ah, don’t be silly, that’s just a conspiracy theory” and thus the argument is over, next topic please.

To those who use it that way I ask first – “are you suggesting there is no such thing as a conspiracy?”  And if they are in any way reasonable, they will say no.

Fine – so we agree conspiracies do exist.  Therefore…how else can we uncover the important ones without first having a theory about it?

I believe conspiracy theories are more important than an American Express card…we should NEVER leave home without them.   Take advertising….every single marketing strategy is a glorified conspiracy when you think of it.   Well, ok, every marketing strategy except for the ones which involve telling you “We want to profit handsomely from this particular item so we would like you to buy it”.  I’ll gladly let those PR campaigns off the hook.

Does that make me a pessimist?  Does that make me anti-business?  Does that mean I have no faith in mankind?  Of course not.  And if you suggest I do, then you go straight on my conspiracy theory checklist.

If we accept there are conspiracies, we therefore must have theories.  And they will remain theories until they are proven.  What’s more, we have an entire profession which is meant to have at its very core the ability to both form and properly investigate conspiracy theories.

The way the media is meant to work is stated in its actual name.  We have the establishment in various guises spinning their actions to the public…reporters are meant to act as a “medium” and use “journalism” to cut through that spin and present us with what is really going on.   However the establishment, being what they are, have been known to influence the media to ignore the journalism part and instead simply re-hash the spin.  Not ALL media fall into this category of course, but with news organisations like Fox & the Wall Street Journal in the US and NewsTalk here on Irish shores, we all know who they are.  Yet they still pedal their re-hashed spin and attempt to pass it off as news, so therefore they must reckon that it works.

All I’m saying is that it is up to us to be ready for it, and that there’s no harm at all at keeping at the back of your mind a “if it looks too good to be true it probably is” mentality.  You don’t have to assume everyone is the devil in disguise, but it doesn’t hurt to keep the eye out for the odd protruding triangular tail, because you will find them.

So to summarize, yes, I have a theory that there is a conspiracy (of sorts) to misuse the term “conspiracy theory”.  And it is a theory i will hold until the men in the white coats, no doubt tipped off by several treasonous kitchen appliances, come to take me away. JLP

The Lobbyists’ Lobby

Sorry I haven’t posted the past few weeks…we’re well into rugby season and when I go to Saturday matches I have pints…and Saturday evening pints makes Sunday morning blogging very difficult!

I just want have a brief ramble about a couple of recent events..the government shutdown in the USA and the 2014 Budget announcement here in Ireland.  Both feature themes which will be integral to this blog.

In many ways, you can’t blame someone for defending their own turf.  We have all done it.  You don’t need a law degree to realise that if you are representing someone else, even if they have done wrong it’s up to you to do all you can to maximise the return they get from the powers that be.

In the USA, everyone knows that the Republican party represent big business.  The identity of those actually pulling the strings may be obscured by complex legal loopholes but I find the term “fat-cats” works fine.  And their front men in Washington did an excellent job these past few weeks…provided their job was to increase the popularity of the Democrats, that is.

To hear those Tea Party congressmen and women whinge about Obamacare is really laughable.  Every time they talk about it their opening sentence is something like : “Of course it’s a disaster” and based on that totally groundless premise they go on to make their “argument”.  And also, in the most telling of ironies, they claim that they are speaking on behalf of “the American people”.

If those American people truly believe the GOP’s motives are based on anything other than the Fat cats’ greed, then they are stupid and deserve everything they get.  The US medical “system” has been a gravy train for insurance & pharmaceutical companies for years to the detriment of the most basic of necessities…citizens receiving basic care.  It needed to be stopped, and though Obamacare is far from ideal, it certainly ensures a lot more Americans are covered than there were before.

Then we have the budget here.  Of course when the Finance Department is compiling its plans you know every lobby group in the country is going to make its case.  You also know that whatever the final announcement by the minister, none of them are going to be happy, or at least they won’t SAY they’re happy for if they do, they’re afraid of being overlooked the following year.

But for the love of all that’s holy…outside those lobby groups, is there any chance SOMEone can be objective when it comes to Budget time?

EVERYONE knew there would be cuts.  They had to come from somewhere.  If it wasn’t the bereavement grant, it would have been something else.  If it wasn’t the “old reliables” fags & booze, it would have been something else.   Yet all the media does is find out who represents those who were hurt the worst and give them free reign to make it sound like the government has just unleashed the apocalypse on their constituency.

And with this current Irish government there is an added bit of insanity to the complaints.  To be clear…we have currently in power a merger between an insanely pro-business party Fine Gael and an insanely pro-union one, the Labour Party.

Everyone who whines about the budget harks back to their respective election manifestos in 2011.  Well if these people were paying that much attention to that campaign they will know that the two parties ran ON SEPARATE PLATFORMS.  So to use “broken promises” as a stick to beat them either shows a hidden agenda or an incredible amount of stupidity. 

The two parties came together and produced a Programme for Government and it is this, and nothing else, on wish they should be judged when it comes to promises.  That will never be enough for the Talking Heads on the panel shows I fear.

Remember…if someone is directly affected by cuts or even Obamacare, I’m not saying they don’t have a right to complain.  Things like the Joe Duffy Show act as a kind of “Victim Impact Statement” for such people, a chance to vent although they know nothing can really be done to change anything.

It’s the so-called “pundits” that annoy me.  we look over to the USA and laugh at FoxNews but over here things are getting just as bad with the likes of NewsTalk which over the years has virtually become what i call “BlueShirtFM” with corporate shills like Shane Colman, Chris Donoghue and Jonathan Healy being elevated to lofty broadcast status because they are happy to trot out the latest tripe from the Denis O’Brien & Michael O’Leary spin factory.  And it’s not as though RTE are much better with their leaning towards Fianna Fáil.

There has to be lobby groups.  There has to be political parties.  All I wish is that we could be given a chance to appreciate those facts and factor their agendas into our discussions rather than being expected to parrot their own soundbites back to them all the time.

Time to get on with my Sunday. JLP

Unicameralism

Learned a new word today.  It looks like it has something to do with photography, but actually means the practise of being governed by just the one legislative chamber.

I had intended to kick off my new blog with a series of posts outlining my general outlook on the subject of government, but not surprisingly there’s actual stuff going on which I can’t ignore, and in many ways by discussing them I will probably give a sense of my overall outlook anyway.

First up we have a referendum here in Ireland this coming Friday.  If the vote is Yes, then there will no longer be a Seanad (Irish for Senate) after the next general election.

I have to say, the way this campaign is being presented to the people truly scares me.

Overall, I try to hold back when it comes to criticising this Fine Gael/Labour coalition.  There’s no need for me to, since everybody else does it anyway.  Because it represents the coming together of two parties from opposite ends of the so-called “spectrum”, the fact that they need to compromise in order to co-exist means that nobody is ever going to be totally happy with the stuff they come up with.  Austerity measures too tough means Labour have sold out.  Abortion legislation means Fine Gael have sold out. 

Despite the fact that most of the people making these claims are well educated grown-ups who know full well about the parties’ need to give and take on different issues, they still put it to the public in the darkest, most simplistic terms.

The same goes with this referendum.

The Seanad as it exists in Ireland today is beyond a joke.  There is no question something needs to be done.  Basically it’s a halfway house for politicians who lose their Dáil seats yet still want to keep up their continuous Oireachtas service and thus qualify for a nice fat pension.  Time after time I am amazed how everyone accepts it when a particular politician fails to get elected yet miraculously winds up in the Senate.  Mary O’Rourke and Ivana Bacik are just two examples of this from recent times.  I have nothing fundamentally against any of them, but it seems to make the most basic of common sense that if they lost an election then they shouldn’t receive payment for a representative position.

Having said that, I am totally in favour of having two legislative bodies.  “Power corrupts – absolute power corrupts absolutely” is an expression which rings true.  Leaving the responsibility of law-making to just the one chamber which is under Government control is a dangerous thing.  That doesn’t mean I have no trust in Government.  There needs to be one, and they have a serious job to do. 

But when they propose new legislation, if there is just the one chamber to examine and debate it, it could pass into law without proper scrutiny, and having it passed on to a Senate at least allows for this.

Does that mean this is what happens now?  Of course not.  As many as ELEVEN of the senators are appointed by the Taoiseach himself, and that’s more than enough to ensure that they are never going to even put an amber light up on his plans, let alone a red.

So if they’re so useless, why don’t we just get rid of them?  In this time of austerity, surely we’d save the exchequer a fortune?

I have another quote with the word “absolute”, and although it may carry less credibility given the source, I believe it works in this case.  In the third “prequel” of the Star Wars saga Revenge of the Sith, during the final battle between Obi-Wan and Anakin/Darth Vader,  the latter says to his former master : “If you’re not with me, then you’re my enemy”, to which Ewan McGregor replies : “Only the Sith deals in absolutes”.

In other words, when someone brings an argument to its furthest extremes, there must surely be something sinister at play.  Let’s have a look at how the government are putting forward this referendum.

“Abolish The Seanad” – “Fewer Politicians” – “Save The Country A Fortune”, all themes used to make it sound like a no-brainer.  Only that’s what it would be, but not in a good way.

Why oh why oh why are we presented with only two alternatives?  Abolish it altogether or continue as we are?  Apparently if a “No” vote is passed there are TDs like Shane Ross with legislation ready to put to the house that deals with reform, but we’re hearing feck all about it.  If there’s any decision that seems like a “no-brainer” to me, it would be that of reforming the system.

For example…one of the Government’s assertions is that abolition means we save money.  There are currently 166 TDs and 60 senators.  Instead of abolishing the Seanad altogether, why don’t we make that 166 figure represent the Dail PLUS the Seanad?  Maybe 140 TDs and 26 senators, one elected from each county?  That’s just a suggestion – there could be countless others.  But they are not being allowed into the debate.  Since it is a referendum, the only options we have are “Yes” and “No”.  And the media will be willing participants in this illusion…they love nothing more than two distinct sides to represent.

Abolishing the Senate would leave the next Government of this country in pretty much absolute power.  Sure, the “checking and balancing” will be done by committees, but these will either be made up of TDs (with a composition leaning towards the cabinet) or worse, unelected appointees.  So effectively the committee structure will become a less accountable reincarnation of the Senate.  No thank you.

We should be debating reform not abolition, and it’s not even up for debate.  In fact, nothing is, as the Taoiseach won’t debate.  And the scariest thing of all is that their “absolute” strategy seems to be working.  Paddy Power have a Yes vote as a virtual certainty at 1/4, and all with a turnout around the woeful 38% mark.

I see two frightening scenarios down the line after a Yes vote…one where this same Fine Gael/Labour government is retained at the next general election, and although they will probably find their majority slashed because of austerity and what-not, their effective power will remain the same as they can get “stuff” done more quickly.

Alternatively we have what I consider to be the real doomsday scenario whereby the Kenny/Gilmore gambit doesn’t pay off and Fianna Fáil find themselves in power once again, albeit with a splintered coalition of independents and yes, even Sinn Féin.  And I have a funny feeling that in this case, even though Micheál Martin is in the “No” camp in this referendum campaign, he wouldn’t exactly complain about being Taoiseach without a pesky Senate being a fly in his ointment.

We need to get our houses in order, and abolishing one will not do that.  I am ABSOLUTELY voting No. JLP

Clearing The Premises

Welcome to the official launch of my new blog, Clearing The Premises.

I chose this particular date a while ago, for three reasons…first, because it is the 9-year anniversary of my first ever blog post, second because it falls on a Sunday, which will be the best day for me to write on it, and finally because it gave me the time to psyche myself up to get back into blogging about life, the universe and everything.

As it turns out, there’s another milestone to celebrate this weekend, as on Friday my first substantial cheque for blogging arrived in the post.  Yes, that’s right, I’m actually being paid to do it now!  A six-month sponsorship deal for my site HarpinOnRugby won’t be something to retire on, but it certainly is something I would never have envisaged when I embarked on this journey in the blogosphere, and hopefully it is a sign of better things to come.

I have to say the sports blog has done wonders for my writing, since the one thing I needed was discipline, and when your subject matter is a particular team, their schedule forces you to produce content on a regular basis, at least it does if you expect to be noticed and make money!

But does this mean I want to write about rugby and nothing else for the rest of by cyber-existence?  Hell, no.

I’ve often tried to work out just what it was that fuelled my lifelong passion for sports of many differing codes.  When it comes to rugby I had no choice but to get a grounding in it because the school I went to brainwashes you 24/7; then Leinster Rugby came along to provide the first real dose of regular, week-in,week-out top-flight action in any code in the 36 years I have lived on this island.  So that association was easy to make.

Still though, I’m fond of other sports, soccer especially, with Tottenham Hotspur taking most of my attention even though they hail from London (shortly after I moved to Ireland aged 8 they won a match 9-0 and a player called Colin Lee, which is my mother’s maiden name, was in the headlines for scoring four goals so thus they were my choice).   And although I have been known to find fault with the GAA I have excellent credentials as a fair-weather fan, today being no exception as the Dubs face Mayo for the coveted Sam Maguire All-Ireland Cup.

So while I’m not so mad about sports that I’d bet on the proverbial two flies running up a wall, it does play a large part of my life and it has taken me a long time to realise that it’s nothing to be ashamed of.  In some ways, it’s kind of like a “soap opera for guys” (though yes, I know, girls love it too just as much!!!) in that it’s not so much about who wins what but more about the individuals involved in the race to bring about those victories.

But there’s another reason I watch sports, and that is to serve as a distraction from the harsh realities of life.  From the seemingly never-ending news of shootings, wars, disasters and austerity.  I don’t want to pretend it isn’t there, I know it always is.  But once in a while it’s nice to be able to consume some media in such a way that you can be entertained without having to be reminded of all that stuff for an hour or so, and for me anyway, sport provides that.  Once I can tune out all the advertising that is…

Being distracted by the sports is all very well, but once in a while I need to be able to face those realities head on and try to make sense of them.  And writing is the best way I can do just that.  So here we have this blog, and hopefully for the foreseeable future I will be able to churn out some thoughts on subjects that don’t involve new scrum laws and why Brian O’Driscoll wasn’t picked for the 3rd Lions test.

Why have I chosen the name “Clearing The Premises”?  Funny I should pretend that you asked.

Many people vote the way they do because of their parents.  Some tow the line and vote the same way, others rebel and do the opposite.  Either way it’s good to at least have a grounding, though I suppose in many ways I should be grateful to my grandparents who raised me in that apart from wishing me to be a devout Catholic, they never really tried to influence me in any way to lean a particular way politically.  In fact, when I finally cared enough to ask them what way they voted in American elections, I was actually surprised to learn that it was Democrat not Republican (I suppose fact that my grandfather was a schoolteacher by profession should have been a clue but I never really gave it any real thought before I turned 30).

This means that I had no real foundation on which to work out how I saw the world, and it took me over 40 years for a pattern to properly emerge…in other words, I really don’t think I could have embarked on a blog like this before now.

One thing is for sure…as much as we’re led to believe that politics is similar to sports in that before you show interest you much choose a particular “team”, I am constantly finding evidence to the contrary.  Take the upcoming referendum here in Ireland on abolishing the Seanad.  The political party on this island that has consistently reflected my opinions has been the Labour party, yet they are for a “Yes” vote, while I am vehemently in the “No” camp, which in the most telling of ironies, has the “nation-wrecking” Fianna Fáil as its only main advocate.

Besides…I don’t like talking about “politics”.  That word represents the argument over who gets to do the job.  I’d much rather talk about the job itself.   The topic should be titled “government”, with “politics” as a mere subset.

So the way I see things, we’re in the wrong neighbourhood even before we start talking about how we’re governed.  And the endless droning on of the talking heads in the media seems to serve little purpose other than to keep our thinking firmly entrenched in that neighbourhood.

With this blog, I want to be able to share with you my thoughts on how I think the world is, not how I feel I should be seeing it.  In other words, I want to challenge, or for the sake of my little pun clear, the premises laid out before me.

Every Sunday morning when I am able, I will embark on a ramble similar to this one.  As much as I enjoy the rugby stuff, it will do me good to regularly pound these keys for a while on something else.  Whether you join me on this journey or not is of course up to you.  But I have TONS to get off my chest, so it will be here regardless. JLP

Finally…a plan

One thing is for sure….this “Clearing The Premises” blog will be up and running with regular posts before the end of the year.

My problem is that I also run another site, one which is actually making me money, so I guess I can be forgiven for making that a priority.

But I do also want to write about topics other than rugby & sport, and here is the place to do that.

I am resigned to the fact that I am an OCD writer.  If I have no structure, I can’t produce.  Thankfully rugby has a new match to writeup every week so the schedule is set for me.  As for the rest of life, well, that’s a tad more complicated, so I have to create my own structure.

This blog will resume on Sunday, September 22, 2013, and there will be at the very least one post every Sunday that follows for the foreseeable future.

There, I’ve said it.  Now I have to do it.  See you then.

forgiveness

2013-07-12 12.47.07

 

I don’t want to bring you down in this glorious Dublin weather, but this scene affected me earlier today so I thought I’d share.

At the base of the lamp-post to the right there is a man, not far off my own age by the looks of him, sitting alone in a car park at noon on a hot summer’s day with nothing but his obvious troubles and a pile of crushed beer cans for company.

And to top it all he is but 100 yards away from a church.  Whether there are more answers to be found there than in the cans, who knows.  But the poignancy was striking.

Do I feel pity for him or disgust?  I couldn’t reconcile it.  So I took a photo.  Once I was safely in my car with my 4-year-old and able to quickly drive off of course!

He didn’t notice.  He wasn’t for noticing anything but the obstacles on his road to forgiving himself.

Game of Thrones

Season 3 has just ended, and I am in the process of catching up when it comes to reading the books, but don’t worry, I won’t bore you with fandom posts.

There’s just a quote from the first book that I’d like to share here, it works well with what will hopefully one day be the theme of this blog if I ever get the chance to post regularly!

It is said by Ser Jorah Mormont to Daenerys Stormborn :
“The common people prey for rain, healthy children, and a summer that never ends,” Ser Jorah told her. “It is no matter to them if the high lords play their game of thrones, so long as they are left in peace.” He gave a shrug. “They never are.”

School Daze

school daze

The year was 1997.  It was the day my first son was christened at the Church of the Assumption, Booterstown.

His mother & I stood behind the altar as we were instructed, holding the baby along with two other couples with their own, waiting for the priest to call us to the font.

All of a sudden a pair of inquisitive young eyes peered at us from the other side of the altar.  It was our 2-year old daughter, who had clearly gotten free of her Gran and gone to see what all the fuss was about.

Last Friday, I went to Our Lady’s School, Terenure, for a ceremony which is known as a “graduation mass”.  Never heard of it before, but was more than happy to go. 

As well as the mass the girls in my daughter’s year, due to take their Leaving Cert exams in a few weeks, got the chance to say goodbye to their alma mater.  They were handed a yearbook by their principal (who was coming to an end to her time in the role and judging by the rhetoric & length of her speech, could well be going into politics), sang some songs, released some ceremonial balloons in the courtyard and in the most symbolic happening of the night, went to change from their school uniforms into their evening wear as they were all going out to celebrate afterwards.

During the ceremony the girls stood to the side of the stage, and down the very back, I could just about make out my daughter’s eyes peering over the classmates in front of her.  This time, her location was chosen because she knew exactly what all the fuss was about, and she clearly preferred to stay in the background on occasions like this, much like her old man.

As a parent it was definitely quite a rollercoaster ride of emotions, with the sadness of seeing your first born all grown up contrasting nicely with the sheer joy of seeing your first born all grown up.

And in a bizarre twist of fate, just one week later, this coming Thursday, I have a meeting with my 4-year old’s infant school as I see the whole process start again!

This new blog is meant to be philosophical, and hopefully over the coming weeks I will be able to outline my overall take on life, the universe and everything as I attempt to, as the above tagline claims, “deconstruct my confusion”.

But I also feel the need to point out that when it comes to my wonderful kids, despite the lightning fast passage of time, there is no confusion whatsoever.  I could not possibly be more proud.

Hail to the Chief

With the rugby blog occupying practically all of my online time I could easily make excuses for not keeping this one going, but that’s not good enough in my book.  As much as I love rugby, I feel I need this site to prove that I do, from time to time, think about slightly more, shall we say, serious matters!

I have renamed my personal blog “Clearing The Premises” for a reason, and pretty soon I will fully explain what that is.  My plan is to reserve Sunday morning’s online time exclusively for posting here, starting in earnest once this hectic rugby season is over.

In the meantime, I will post the transcript of this speech made recently by the President of Ireland Michael D Higgins to the European Parliament – in many ways it is relevant to what I want to do here.

A Uachtaráin, a Chomhaltaí de Pharlaimint na hEorpa, ba mhaith liom mo bhuíochas a ghabháil libh as ucht an deis a thabhairt dom labhairt leis an tionól seo ina dtugtar le chéile ionadaithe na saoránach, arna dtoghadh go díreach agus go daonlathach, ó na seacht mballstát fichead, ocht gcinn fichead go luath, den Aontas Eorpach.

[Mr. President, Members of the European Parliament, may I thank you for giving me the opportunity of addressing this assembly which brings together the democratically, directly elected, representatives of the citizens of the 27 member states, soon to be 28, of the European Union.]

I address you mar Uachtarán na hEireann, as President of Ireland, an island that has always been connected to matters European; a country that has always looked outward; a people with a very strong connection with the cultures and learning of Europe in all its diversity from ancient times; and a nation that has valued that European vocation through every century into the present when Ireland holds, for the seventh time, the Presidency of the Council of Ministers in our fortieth year of membership of the Union.

Be it in our ancient Celtic connections, in our continuous connection with European scholarship, or in our modern consistent support for European unity we have been European in our consciousness and commitment. Europe has always had an existence in the Irish mind.

In our own Gaelic language the mythic stories of Europe have always been present and some of our modern plays recall the use that was made of the classical sources of Greek and Roman myths in the Gaelic hedge schools that preceded the widespread use of the English language. The Irish language that preceded English had been deeply influenced by ancient European myths, particularly the great myths of sea and exile such as that of Homer’s Odyssey. In the areas of literature, the peoples of Europe have had an old and enduring sense of respect for what is a cultural diversity frequently drawn from a shared body of myth.

It was, however, in the tasks of the mind and the spirit that the Irish sought to make their greatest contribution. Thus it was that in July 1950 the then Irish Prime Minister, John A. Costello, together with the Irish Foreign Minister, Nobel Peace Laureate, and founding member of Amnesty International, Sean McBride travelled to Luxeuil-Les-Bains to officially celebrate the 1400th anniversary of the birth of one of the greatest Irish and European saints and scholars, Columbanus. It was Columbanus who with St. Gall and others established centres of learning, manuscript illumination, monasteries and communities across Europe from the North of Ireland to Bobbio, where Columbanus actually died.

It is of the spirit of citizenship as it might be at a European level, as might motivate Europeans who want to give the two words – European and Union – a sense of fulfilment, and of human flourishing that I wish to speak of in this year that has been dedicated as “European Year of the Citizen”.

But one more word about that meeting in Luxeuil-Les-Bains in July 1950. No more than some meetings of the contemporary period, its real agenda was not as publicly indicated. It was declared to be ecclesiastical in purpose; after all, the Papal Nuncio to France, Monsignor Roncalli, later to be Pope John XXIII, was present, as was the Bishop of Bobbio. But we now know, from the work of the distinguished scholar of the Sorbonne Marguerite Marie Dubois, modernist, linguist, philosopher and lexicographer, that the meeting was really organized so as to facilitate a meeting of Robert Schuman, Foreign Minister of France, with like minded others from a number of European countries anxious to test his great idea for the coming together of the countries of Europe.

Schuman, reached back to recall the early monastic perigrinatio and declared Columbanus to be “the patron saint of all those who now seek to build a united Europe”.

The Schuman meeting, and the others which followed it, assisted by such as Jean Monnet, was responding to near and terrible events. But we should never forget, and I emphasize it today, that in their response they recognized, and drew on, the rich scholarship, philosophy, moral instincts and generous impulses of European thought as they sought, not only to replace war with peace, but more importantly, to offer a vision of Europe’s people working together in an inclusive way.

Yet the inspiration and the achievements of the founders of the European Union cannot be taken for granted. Today, citizens in Europe are threatened with an unconscious drift to disharmony, a loss of social cohesion, a recurrence of racism and a deficit of democratic accountability. These threatening clouds hang over a Europe that in more hopeful times, chose to base its anthem, rather than on anything contemporary, on Friedrich Schiller’s poem ‘Ode to Joy’ and its musical setting by Ludwig Van Beethoven in his Ninth Symphony.

Centuries of effort have been invested by European citizens in securing the vote. It is to parliament citizens look for accountability, for strategic alternatives. If national parliaments, if the European Parliament, were to lose the capacity to deliver accountability where else might it be found? Is there an alternative that can meet the requirements of a deliberative democracy?

I am conscious, in this year of the European Citizen, that as Parliamentarians you are the elected component of the European Union, elected by citizens from diverse electorates on the same day. I want to wish you well in all your deliberations together and particularly in your dialogue with your electorate – the citizens of Europe. They, the citizens, place their trust in parliament when they vote and they rightly have expectations of parliaments responding to their needs. I very much welcome the influence and decision-making powers that the European Parliament has won in relation to the multi-annual budgeting process and wish you well in discharging that responsibility on behalf of the citizens of Europe.

How would the founders of the European Union respond to our present circumstances you might ask?

We know how hard the institutions, including this one, have worked to overcome the most serious economic crisis the Union has faced; how they have struggled to match the speed of their reaction to the ferocity of its onslaught.

We cannot, however, ignore the fact that European citizens are suffering the consequences of actions and opinions of bodies such as rating agencies, which, unlike Parliaments, are unaccountable. Many of our citizens regard the response to the crisis as disparate, sometimes delayed, not equal to the urgency of the task and showing insufficient solidarity.

They feel that the economic narrative of recent years has been driven by dry technical concerns; for example, by calculations geared primarily by a consideration of the impact on speculative markets, rather than by sufficient compassion and empathy with the predicament of European citizens who are members of a union.

In facing up to the challenges Europe currently faces, particularly in relation to unemployment, we cannot afford to place our singular trust in a version of a logistical, economic theory whose assumptions are questionable and indifferent to social consequences in terms of their outcome. Instead of a discourse that might define Europe as simply an economic space of contestation between the strong and the weak, our citizens yearn for the language of solidarity, of cohesion, for a generous inclusive rhetoric that is appropriate to an evolving political union.

This is a serious challenge, not least because of the risk that an economic crisis will lead to a crisis of legitimacy for the Union. The Union in its founding treaties is fundamentally founded on values – respect for personal dignity; freedom; democracy; equality; the rule of law and respect for human rights.

The Union draws its legitimacy from the support of its citizens. That connection with the citizens – their belief that the European Union is of them and for them – is fundamental. Without it, we are adrift. Citizens need an appeal to their heart as well as their reason. They need reassurance now that the Union will keep faith with its founding treaties.

It is many years since Jacques Delors declared “Europe needs a soul”, but it remains just as true. We should never forget that we are the inheritors of a profoundly important set of European values – Greek democracy, Roman law, the Judeo-Christian tradition, the reformation, the enlightenment, the great democratic revolution that began in France. Europe is therefore more than an economic space of contestation in which our citizens are invited or required to deliver up their lives in the service of an abstract model of economy and society whose core assumptions they may not question or put to democratic test in elections.

As we face into the future, we need to draw strength from the founding values of the Union. These include cohesion and solidarity – among Member States, among the citizens of our Union, and between the European Union and the rest of the world.
We need to apply ourselves to building a better future together – as Jacques Delors also said of this present crisis “Europe does not just need fire-fighters, it needs architects too”.

A first and urgent task must be to get Europe back to sustainable and fulfilling employment and a return to real growth. There is nothing more corrosive to society and more crushing to an individual than endemic unemployment, particularly among the young. Today there are 26 million people across the Union without work, and 115 million in or at risk of poverty and social exclusion. We cannot allow this to continue.

Irish Presidencies have always drawn from the spirit of the founding treaties and the current Irish Presidency has put job creation right at the top of the agenda. The European Council has agreed that addressing unemployment is the most important social challenge we face. At last month’s Social Summit, you, Mr President, rightly warned of the repercussions of the spread of unemployment and poverty across the Union.

I commend the agreement reached in the European Council in February on the Youth Employment Initiative, and the subsequent proposals from the Commission to make it operational by the start of next year. I also very much welcome the agreement reached in the Council on the Youth Guarantee that will ensure all young people under the age of 25 receive a good quality offer of employment, education, apprenticeship or training within four months of being unemployed.

But we need to do more. We need to ensure that women participate in the workplace as equals; that older workers are not left on the sidelines; and that the long-term unemployed are fully equipped to find their way back into today’s work place. We must, above all, ensure that a loss of employment does not lead to exclusion from participation, particularly in the cultural space of one’s community.

We need also to consider how to encourage people to create jobs. We need to value and support our Small and Medium Sized Enterprises, the lifeblood of so many of our communities. We need to sustain those that want to create opportunity for themselves and for others. We need to encourage creativity, innovation, entrepreneurship.

A generous vision of Europe is, of course, not one that looks solely inwards.
The European model has inspired many others on their journey to peace and democratic institutions. While its light may not have dazzled as brightly in recent years, Europe can yet be a beacon of hope and encouragement for many less fortunate people in the world. It can give a lead, for example, with a unified voice on climate change, recognizing that those least contributing to our global problem are paying the highest price, even as we meet today.

How the European Union engages with the rest of the world is a major test of its authority and credibility. Will the Union allow its current economic difficulties to undermine its commitment on the great global challenges of our day – hunger, poverty, human rights, climate justice? I hope not. Will we reaffirm the generous idealism at the heart of the European vision by rededicating ourselves to tackling these problems in solidarity with other partners? I hope we do. The measures that replace the Millennium Development Goals – how they respect diversity, recognize different paths to development and have human rights at their centre – will be a major test for Europe and the global community.

I believe that a European Union that has the courage to face all of its past, including its periods of empire, with honesty, and its future with a commitment to values that are inclusive of all humanity, with a discourse that respects diversity, has a profound contribution to make – not only to its own citizens in Europe but to the global community. It can give a lead in creating a form of ethical globalization that recognizes intergenerational responsibilities.

Such an integrated discourse as might allow for this to happen is, I believe, missing just now. The prevailing narrative seems to be trapped intellectually in a structure of thought which it appears unable to challenge, from which it seems unable, or at times even unwilling, to escape.

In the absence of considering other possible models or approaches, we are in danger of drifting into, and sustaining, a kind of moral and intellectual impotence. Yet we have available to us a rich legacy of intellectual, radical work upon which we could draw.

There is, in our shared intellectual heritage for example, in the energetic pursuit of new thought that characterised the European Enlightenment, itself formed from the thought of other ancient Enlightenments, some powerful examples of dissident and radical thought. Let us never forget the singular example given by those dissident thinkers, Diderot, Kant and Herder. They in their times saw the flaw in the Enlightenment thinking that supported empire, with its insatiable drive, and courageously challenged it through their books, pamphlets and public expressions.

The logistical strand of economics which today, as a hegemonic model of economic theory, holds sway is, of course, useful for limited and defined tasks. It is insufficient however for our problems and our future. We need a new substantive, political economy and an emancipatory discourse to deliver it, and I suggest that this is possible.

There is an urgent need for new models of connection between economy, society and policy. These are essential for genuine, pluralist choices in policy, not to speak of democratic accountability and relevance, if we are to address the current challenges.
As European Parliamentarians, I encourage you to let these new models into the European discourse, give them space in the committee structure of the Parliament and the institutional structure of the Union.

But to achieve that discourse the role of public intellectuals is also an urgent one.

They are called upon, I suggest, to state publicly and unequivocally that the problems of Europe are not simply technical, and certainly not solely amenable to solution by technocratic measures at the expense of democratic accountability. The suggestion that citizens and their representatives are not fiscally or economically literate enough to carry the decision making necessary for policies that impinge on their lives – be it unemployment, housing, health, education or the environment – has the most serious implications in legitimacy terms.

A disembodied version of the economic space if used as a substitute for peoples, societies, or states loses its connection with history, contemporary challenges and would lack the moral connection with the ethics and solidarity we now need. It would evade rather than face our present challenges.

A European Union – if it is to be respected as the great project it is and can be – must draw on the intellectual heritage and the intellectual imaginings, and the existing talents and capacity of the peoples of Europe. It is a fully authentic Union if it is characterised by solidarity.

Mar focal scoir [In conclusion]:

If it is not of this authentic character just now, it must be made so by changes in consciousness and commitment, and through reasserting the idealism, intellectual strength and moral courage that drove the founding fathers of the Union. European Member States are peoples, with history, with current needs, with possibilities to be shared.

If we were, as an alternative, to regard our people as dependent variables to the opinions of rating agencies, agencies unaccountable to any demos, and indeed found to be fallible on occasion, then instead of being citizens we would be reduced to the status of mere consumers; pawns in a speculative chess board of fiscal moves in a game derived from assumptions that are weak, untestable or more frequently undeclared.

To ask that our decisions be normative rather than narrowly, fiscally technocratic is, I suggest, more than an integration of our intellectual capacities. It is to defend and deepen democracy. I readily acknowledge the utility in so many areas of logistical economics. However, I believe that if its methods are elevated to being a substitute for the integrated multi-disciplinary scholarship that is needed to address the varying contexts and contingencies of current challenges, such a sole reliance on a technocratic approach would be markedly insufficient.

If we are to deliver the European Union of peace and prosperity that the founders envisaged, and that I believe the citizens of Europe yearn for beyond the understandable fear of present circumstances, a strategy that draws on the world views of all of the social sciences, and ethics and philosophy is required.

President, Members of Parliament,

From the flux of diverse histories, from our current problems, from our fears and our aspirations I hope will emerge a response that constitutes a tapestry of many colours, of different strengths in its threads; and, in its design, evocative of what memory has made endure, and the human spirit has invested with hope. Whether it is made out of wondrous reason or woven with a prayer will not matter. What matters is that it be work of us all, working together, in co-operation, cosmopolitan and open to the world, caring for it, in an inter-generationally responsible way, and embracing all our people as equal citizens.

We the citizens of the European Union want to make a real Union together, something indeed worthy of the “Ode to Joy”.

Starting over


Who said Doctor Who had the monopoly on endless re-incarnations???

My personal blogs over the years have had various titles…

“JLP’s Diary”
“A Bit O’ Pampering And The Odd Shag”
“All Smoke And Mirrors”
“jlpagano.net”
“Harpin’ On Stuff”

…but it doesn’t really matter what the name is if I’m not making entries, does it?

Most of my time is spent on the rugby site this weather.  And I am in the process of taking that to “the next level”, whatever that is.

But I still want an outlet where I can talk about life “n” stuff, so I have decided to revert the bulk of the content of this blog to draft and start again.

That’s not the only reason I have re-named the site “Clearing The Premises”, however, but hopefully I will be able to explain that (and the new logo) more fully over the coming weeks.


© JL Pagano 2013