What the British are really laughing about
Lawrence
Richards
21
September, 2015
Whether
or not it’s true, the Internet has decided for the time being that
British Prime Minister David Cameron probably put his private parts
into the mouth of a dead pig when he was at Oxford. The allegations
have been made by extremely well-connected Establishment figures,
former Conservative Party Deputy Chairman Lord (Michael) Ashcroft,
and former Sunday Times political editor Isabel Oakeshott, and the
story is published in the Daily Mail, which makes this the highest
possible tier of character assassination in British politics.
Ashcroft’s
goal is, according to the Mail, “revenge”. In the years leading
up to Cameron taking office in 2010, the tax-dodging
billionaire had donated over £8 million to the Conservative
Party, bailing them out of debt after their disastrous election
defeat in 2005. He had worked as Treasurer and later Deputy Chairman
of the party, helping to manage them back to an electable public
image under Cameron. Yet Ashcroft had expected that he would be given
high office in exchange for this, and Cameron didn’t pay up when
the time came. It now appears Ashcroft has spent the last five years
compiling his new book, Call
Me Dave,
in which the pig story and other damning allegations about the Prime
Minister are made.
Outsiders
to the British cultural landscape are focusing on the central detail
that a leader of a G8 country screwed a dead pig, because
it’s hilarious.
But the howling laughter of the British themselves goes deeper than
just schadenfreude at a man doing something disgusting and getting
caught – this is about class.
When
Cameron was at Oxford, he was a member of several secret societies of
rich young men. The most famous of these is the Bullingdon
Club, after which Yale’s infamous Skull and Bones is fashioned.
The aim of the Bullingdon Club is ostensibly to dress up fancy with
the chaps, get blind drunk at an expensive restaurant or private
dining room, and trash the place – because they can afford to pay
for the damages without doing a day’s work. Among their known
initiation rites, they are said to have to burn a £50 bill in front
of a homeless person.
And
that leads to the other side of what the Bullingdon Club (and
societies like it) is about: upper class right wing team-building.
The friendships and alliances forged in the secret drinking societies
of powerful rich kids go on to define their careers, and these young
men all have access to the highest rungs of British society.
Three prominent
members of Cameron’s cabinet were members, whilst many
others went on to run the banks that crashed the economy in 2008 and
the media empires that protect them.
Burning
money in front of a homeless person isn’t just intended to be a
nasty prank, it serves to train a Bullingdon boy’s senses, to make
other humans seem somehow less. That David Cameron and his allies
George Osborne and Boris Johnson have all done this, and that they
have all presided over a sharp spike in homelessness in London and
throughout the UK, are not coincidental. The MP who provided Lord
Ashcroft with the details of the pig story attended one meeting of
the expensive club but left in disgust because ‘it was all about
despising poor people’.
And
thus part of the reason why the British are so ready to believe Lord
Ashcroft’s story, aside from the fact that Ashcroft is a top-tier
Establishment figure in a country with absurdly
plaintiff-friendly libel laws, is that Cameron’s ideological
training is already well understood by the public. There is nothing
likable about such a background, particularly when the ruling class
it produces is waging a war on the poor and disabled that would have
made Thatcher blush.
So
to then hear that the guy at the top of that pyramid was
peer-pressured into putting his dick in a pig’s mouth or risk not
being included in a club of nasty, entitled people, it creates a much
more satisfying reaction than mere laughter. A figure of terror
becomes a figure of ridicule, a reversal like the boggarts in Harry
Potter, who impersonate your worst nightmares until you can cast a
spell on them that makes them look absurd.
The
pig scandal that now has the world laughing at Cameron wasn’t from
the Bullingdon Club but the Piers Gaverston, less well-known (until
this week), but with a reputation for bizarre sexual rituals and
initiation rites. Where the Bullingdon boys built their fraternity
around shared values of hating the poor, the Piers Gaverston was
about sexual humiliation and the creation of shared secrets. Its
structural function is as an agreement of mutually assured
destruction between the rulers of tomorrow – I know your secret and
you know mine, so let’s stay on the same side, yeah?
This
forms one of the core mechanics of the British ruling class – why
reveal someone’s dirty little secret when you can keep schtum about
it and control them? This forms the basis of the parliamentary
whipping system, where the Chief Whip of each respective party is
expected to have an arsenal of dirt locked away in their office so
that when the time comes, their party leader can ‘whip’
rebellious backbenchers with threats that sometimes include leaking
that story about you that you really don’t want to be leaked.
In
this elite culture not all corruption is financial. When it comes to
the top of British politics, sound character and a clean record do
not make you an asset. You’ll have a hard time joining unless they
can confirm that you are scum – and can make sure that the public
don’t know about it.
An
interesting example of this is the role Margaret Thatcher played in
the elevation of certain members of her government and its allies.
Recent allegations in the growingparliamentary
child abuse scandal arose that Thatcher “turned
a blind eye” to pedophiles that she promoted, including the
provision of knighthoods to known serial child abusers Jimmy Savile
and Cyril Smith. Her own Home Secretary, the now deceased Leon
Brittan, is still being investigated.
In
each case, Thatcher is now thought to have been warned by security
services about the deviancy of these men, but is alleged to have
studiously ignored it. When it comes to secret-keeping and elite
power, it is not out of the question that in knowing they were child
abusers, Thatcher would have had political leverage over these allies
of hers, and so promoting them would have helped her strengthen her
own power while in office.
The
parliamentary child abuse scandal is horrifying enough on its own
terms, but beyond that it has also further undermined public trust in
Westminster, already increasingly despised for being out-of-touch and
unaccountable after financial crises and expenses
scandals turn in a unsatisfyingly low number of scalps for
voters to collect.
Where
this relates to Cameron’s little mishap is that the public are
already exhausted to the point of raw antipathy with the way
Westminster power works, as a marketplace of secrets among
unaccountable elites. Our politicians might be screwing children, but
the ones who could help us to find out about it are making
sure that story is blocked. When that kind of behavior is the
norm, the British public can’t really be blamed for believing that
their PM put his knob into a pig to join a secret society. This, too,
is probably normal to these people.
Something
grievously misunderstood by many members of the British ruling class
is that they believe hatred of the ‘Bullingdon boy’ archetype
comes from mere jealousy. The vast majority of the privately educated
men who run the country really
think that everyone wants to be more like them, and that
therefore any criticism of elites comes first and foremost from envy.
This
is in large part because one of the core beliefs instilled into the
7% of pupils who attend Britain’s divisive
independent schools is that of meritocracy. This despite the
fact that not only can most people not afford to send their children
to these fee-paying schools, the ones who do attend them end up
getting an easy ladder up to high society. They make up a third of
MPs, nearly half of all newspaper columnists, a majority of Lords,
diplomats and senior civil servants, and over 70% of senior judges.
It is common knowledge that the old boys’ network looks after its
own.
This
doesn’t stop them from telling
the public that the system is fair. Alumnus of Eton and
former Bullingdon boy Boris Johnson said
in a speech to the Centre for Policy Studies that the people
with the highest IQ have the best jobs because they’re smart. Not
only was this not even remotely true, Boris then ‘failed’
a live IQ test on air, yet persisted in the notion that kids who go
to independent schools do well because they’re brilliant. He has
served variously as a cabinet minister, Mayor of London, newspaper
columnist, and magazine editor, enjoying each job with the support of
powerful people with whom he went to school.
The
Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne (also of the Bullingdon
Club), was criticized by charities representing poor and disabled
people whose economic and household security was ruined by his
reforms. He dismissed
them as “anti-business” and gave tax breaks to
millionaires (half of whom, incidentally, went to independent
schools) in the name of “fairness”.
And
David Cameron himself often likes to talk about the supposed
existence of meritocracy in the United Kingdom. He, too, went to Eton
before joining the Bullingdon Club and the Piers Gaverston. He is one
of the most vocal Conservatives when it comes to championing
the ideology
of meritocracy, telling poor people and ethnic minorities that
their lack of social climbing is because they lack “aspiration”,
and that ‘free’ markets (that is, unregulated financial bonanzas,
by his allegiances) “can make you a better person”.
Separate
from what he says, however, his government has
significantly increased
inequality and decreased social
mobility, making it even harder for people outside of his
privileged background to fulfill the meritocratic values he regularly
trumpets.
The
wound of that hypocrisy was already festering before Lord Ashcroft
punished him this week for breaking the rules of the ritual: that you
will obey the people who made you, or you will be humiliated. This
wasn’t, as some have said, young men being silly. Not if the
secrets being kept are designed by powerful men to keep other
powerful men under control. That kind of arrangement is the
antithesis of democracy.
And
it is also the antithesis to the meritocracy they proclaim. Not just
because it’s rich boys getting an easy ride to the top – we
already knew that – but because David Cameron’s nasty little
scandal speaks to a suspicion many people already have: that in
British society, you don’t get to become Prime Minister because
you’re talented or because you work hard. You don’t even get
there just because you’re rich. You get there by traumatizing the
homeless and skull-fucking a dead pig, and that ritual gives you
power because you have demonstrated utter, pathetic submission to
your fellow oligarchs.
That is
why we’re laughing.
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