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I have a burning need to know stuff and I love asking awkward questions.

Thursday, August 26, 2021


Just Finished Reading: WTF? By Robert Preston (FP: 2017) [280pp]

It was the double-whammy of the Brexit vote and the election of Donald Trump in the US that made the author (and to be honest many other people) to wonder WTF? In this interesting and often entertaining book the author attempts to answer that question in the form of a long letter written to his departed father.

Although the Trump Presidential victory is mentioned in passing throughout the book the vast majority of it is about the author trying to figure out both why people voted to Leave the EU and, probably more importantly, why the Liberal media elite (in which he recognises himself) singularly missed the signals that said a Leave vote was coming. Part of the reason, he freely admits, was that he lived for the most part in a Remain ‘bubble’ in London among his other Liberal Remain intelligentsia friends and family. For the author the fact of Remain was a no-brainer. In the months before the vote I spoke to a reasonable number of people at work (so a very self-selecting group) plus other friends and family and actually called the 52-48% split to Leave. I actually regretted not putting a bet on as I could have made a few ‘quid’ on that! What the author didn’t realise, as he honestly should have being a political journalist(!), is that a great many people did not see Remaining as a no-brainer at all but quite the opposite. The Remain campaign, as most of my friends agreed, spent far too much time harping on how bad things would get if we left the EU. I actually think that they’re basically right but such statements were quickly dubbed ‘Project Fear’. The problem with this approach is that quite a few people honestly thought (and presumably still think) that they had precious little left to lose so such losses hardly figured in their calculation. What the Remain campaign also failed to realise is that they were essentially trying to sell a ‘Business as Usual’ message to people who had been suffering under such a regime and watching their livelihoods crumble year after year and decade after decade as they were increasingly side-lined and ignored in favour of a Southern (mostly London) Europhile ‘elite’. They were hardly going to vote in droves for more of the same. Leave, meanwhile, gave the ignored a voice all of a sudden in a vote with actual consequences – rather than one which merely rearranged the deckchairs on their political Titanic. So the Leave vote really shouldn’t have come as THAT much of a shock (actually they should have been more surprised that it was THAT close!). Given that they had nothing of consequence to lose (or at least that was the perception) they voted to Leave at least in the hope that the abandonment of ‘Business as Usual’ at least MIGHT make things better – plus it gave them the warm feeling of slapping the elites in the face for ignoring them for so long. Such a response is completely understandable. But, like the author himself, far too many people in the Remain camp (or the South-East/London ‘bubble’) missed just how annoyed – or down right angry – many people were, with a great deal of justification.

Although this was generally an interesting read I did feel a bit disappointed that the situation in America wasn’t covered more that the occasional passing reference. I was pretty much expecting this to be a 50-50 compare and contrast deal – which it definitely wasn’t. I suppose I also found it a little bit boring at times because I’d hashed and rehashed the arguments around Brexit over and over again with my friends and at work (I only touched on it briefly with my family as they all voted to Leave – even my Mother who hadn’t voted for anything since the late 1970’s). Recommended only really for those who didn’t live through it on an hourly basis for the last (seemingly) million years…..        

7 comments:

Stephen said...

Things like this always make sense in hindsight. Hillary didn't see 2016 happening -- and neither did I, frankly. Trump was such an atypical figure that I had no idea how he'd place.

CyberKitten said...

Both Trump & Brexit are more explicable once you start delving into things. I know both came as a shock at the time - as did the collapse of the Soviet Union of course! Again, looking backwards from that event it became explicable and maybe even obvious. In both Brexit & Trump a large mass of the population was taken for granted by the so-called 'Liberal elite' and they paid for that shortsightedness. But I think the underlying causes of both have been around for quite a while and, of course, haven't gone away. I think we're in for an INTERESTING decade!!

mudpuddle said...

remember the ancient Chinese curse: "may you live in interesting times"

CyberKitten said...

I think these days are always 'interesting'. Did you know there are two more 'bits' to that curse - both progressively worse?

May you Live in an Interesting Place.... and the WORST of ALL

May you Be an Interesting Person..... OUCH!

mudpuddle said...

i should have guessed!

James said...

Like Stephen said, this was similar to the reaction to Hillary in 2016 in the United States. Unlike him, I saw it coming and was not surprised at the result. Although both candidates were unlikable in different ways, Hillary was more of what the "deplorables" detested in the previous presidency, just as you highlighted that the Brexit supporters felt about the "Southern (mostly London) Europhile ‘elite’". In spite of his detractors, Trump almost won again in 2020 when the Democrats kept Biden hiding in his basement. If only Biden had been allowed to campaign we might have seen his senility before he became President. Now he is merely a figurehead, controlled by bureaucrats on his staff.

CyberKitten said...

@ James: Of course without the Electoral College in the middle of things Hillary would have actually won in 2016 if they'd just counted the 'popular vote'. It does seem a rather strange way of doing things and actually positively undemocratic. Hasn't the Electoral College essentially overturned the 'will of the people' on multiple occasions over the years? 5 times isn't it or something like that??

Biden is definitely far too old to hold office but a 2020 victory for Trump would've been an absolute disaster in my opinion. Or should I say an even bigger disaster...

Looking at the Brexit fallout here we're experiencing regular 'supply chain' issues due to lack of truck drivers (believe it or not!). Part of that is because of Covid but I also think that some of it at least is the presently hidden consequences of thousands of EU residents going back home. Over time we'll realise how much we depended on 'foreign' labour here.