Yesterday, the subject of his latest political re-education harangue was homelessness, which, apparently, doesn’t mean actually living on the streets so much as living off taxpayer-funded benefits in temporary accommodation. Easton’s chosen “victim” was an articulate middle-class American woman whose husband had deserted her and their children. As a result she and her kids had ended up living in a bit of a dump. I’m sure few people watching would have felt anything but sympathy for the woman (who is suffering from clinical depression) and her kids. But I'm also sure that many viewers will have been left wondering how she got herself into this awful scrape - where exactly is her husband, and why isn't he being forced to pay for the upkeep of his family? And I especially resented Easton’s tawdry attempt to manipulate his mainly middle-class audience. The implication was clear: even smug, complacent people of our sort can end up homeless, and then we’d feel jolly sorry for not wanting to pay so much and thereby giving this heartless government carte blanche to destroy our glorious welfare system.
After interviewing a spokesman from that politically even-handed organisation, Shelter, there was an exchange from the day’s PMQs in which Harriet Harman aimed the following barb at David Cameron: “Now I know he doesn’t have to budget – but many families do.” This from a qualified lawyer who went to St Paul’s Girls School, who is related to the fabulously posh Pakenhams, owns a lovely house in Suffolk, and probably isn't short of a bob or two.
In the middle of his report, Easton, the Champion of the Poor, had this to say: “Official figures tomorrow are expected to show a sharp rise in poverty as cuts in welfare hit low income households.” The implication being, of course, that George Osborne’s further planned welfare cuts will leave millions starving in the gutter. Unfortunately for Easton, the official figures published today show no such thing: the number of children living in “relative” poverty remains at 2.3 million, and the proportion of children living in “relative” poverty is also unchanged. As Iain Duncan Smith reminded us, child poverty figures are better than they have been since Mrs. Thatcher’s glory days. Which, when you come to think about it, is a bit of a mystery, given that there have already been some welfare cuts. Since joblessness has been relentlessly falling, could it possibly be that cutting the sort of benefits that trap people in a web of dependency might actually encourage some of them to, you know, go out and actually get a job? Obviously not in Mark Easton’s fantasy universe.
Easton’s pay-off line was a classic of its kind: “The government thinks that the current definition of poverty – based solely on income – is too narrow, and would like a new measure. Critics worry that arguments about the measurement of poverty will distract from tackling its causes.”
Critics? What, like you, Mark? There are just so many lazy, outmoded, leftist assumptions behind that last barbed statement, it’s hard to know where to start. Listen, Easton, you deluded egalitarian pillock – any fool knows that not everyone who lives in relative poverty is living in genuine poverty. If I were to compare my circumstances with the people living in nearby Bedford Park (average house price well over £2.5m) I would be considered relatively poor. But, of course, I’m not. The use of relative poverty as a measurement has given politically committed “journalists” like you and all your chums in the Labour Party, the Lib Dems, the Scottish Nationalist Party and the Occupy Movement a useful stick with which to beat anyone even vaguely trying to curb the grotesque levels of welfare spending in this country. Why in the name of God do you imagine Calais is besieged by hordes of immigrants desperate to get into Britain (well, England, actually)? As one Sudanese gentleman succinctly put it yesterday when asked why he was so keen to get here: "Free house England! Free house England!" Maybe he should be shown a collection of your enlessly whining, wildly exaggerated, downbeat reports: he'd realise what a cruel, poverty-stricken hellhole he was attempting to enter, and instantly head back home , relieved at his narrow escape.
The majority of British voters (i.e. those who voted Conservative or UKIP) rejected your anachronistic left-wing nostrums just a few weeks ago. Do you honestly not feel some qualms about continuing to stick two fingers up to the majority of BBC licence-fee payers by peddling the same dreary old “New Marxist” approach to social problems, welfare and taxation? This country just came to its senses: it’s about time you did. It doesn't do anything for the people who are in genuine need in Britain to pretend that everyone currently in receipt of benefits deserves them.
You could start by using your report on today’s poverty figures to apologise for having misled the viewing public and for wrongly attacking the government in yesterday’s report. As if.
Excellent stuff! Easton is a pet hate and his continued freedom to peddle this Marxist drivel, without even a whiff of an opposing view, is as much proof of the BBC's innate Leftism as is the freedom afforded to his stable mate, Harrabin, the false prophet of climate doom.
ReplyDeleteShame there's no after the event editing. 'Stable mate', indeed.
ReplyDeleteOr a time machine. That would do, too.
In place of "after the event editing" Easton merely blamed "the experts" for getting their predictions wrong, and then churned out several hundred words of utter bullshit, went on about Bill Clinton (?), and ended with the following bizarre paragraph: "Politicians of all stripes will agree that child poverty rates in Britain remain too high. But today's statistics do not provide much ammunition to those who claim the welfare strategy is the problem rather than the solution."
DeleteI'm not sure what "too high"means in this context, given that Tory politicians evidently disagree with the definition of child poverty, and I haven't got a frigging clue why Easton is so sure the statistics don't provide "much ammunition" for those who argue that cutting welfare forces people to get jobs - seems like plenty of ammunition to me.
The man is evidently shameless.
"Innefable" puts you in the shade. That's really bad.
ReplyDelete'innefable'? Where?
ReplyDeleteWhat the eff (or "ef") are you on about? I may very well have misspelled it somewhere on the blog (although a search hasn't revealed any instances), but not in this particular post.
ReplyDeleteExplain yourself at once, SDG.
I made a comment on your previous post on Brando and referred to him as "The Innefable One" ie I got the spelling wrong. Wish I hadn't started this. In your Amazon post the name you are looking for is B. Piper and her huge gob. I remember the days when you used to be quite sharp.
ReplyDeleteAh - thanks for clearing up that conundrum. Brain admittedly a bit blunt these days.
DeleteNever mind SDG. The Blogmeister had 'combing' instead of 'combining' in the first line.
DeleteThank you, ex-KCS. I have corrected the error, and now you'll look pretty bloody silly, I can tell you.
DeleteThe poverty in Tower Hamlets is truly shocking.Until the council fit an extra bathroom so that the sexes can bathe unencumbered as it were as befits their sex,both sexes have to share the same bathroom which is of course totally unacceptable to most of the denizens of that borough.
ReplyDeleteI assume As is is referring to Shari'ah law,and the local councils in Britain falling over themselves to provide such households with a second bathroom-one for the men of the house and one for the wife or wives.Yup such terrible poverty.
ReplyDeleteI think the women of Tower Hamlets should be jolly grateful that they're allowed to use a bathroom at all! I hope they're made to wait while their Lord and Master completes his leisurely perusal of The Jihadi Times while at stool - or whatever the preferred reading matter is these days.
ReplyDeleteGiven my ethnic origins, I wonder if our council would bung in a sauna free of charge?