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Waiting For The Etonians: Reports from the Sickbed of Liberal Britain by Nick Cohen
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26 February 2009
But this is not true for Nick Cohen, who has been on New Labour's case for at least a decade. He tells us how this recession was partly a result of our government's strange identity as a party that wanted it both ways. "For all its virtuous intentions," he says, "the political Left was living off the proceeds of loose financial morals.
Prostituting itself, to be blunt." I really sank into these essays. Hours whizzed by. Cohen is Left-wing but he specialises in knocking the Left. He tells us, in painful detail, how the Left got so confused. Why, he wonders, are his fellow liberals not more worried about "sexists, homophobes and fascists from other cultures?" Partly, he says, because they are scared of looking like racists. And partly because, in these sabre-rattling times, they're just plain scared.
Synopsis by Foyles.co.uk
Selected writings from one of the most important commentators of our generation covering the wreckage of Labour's 10 year love affair with the Right BY THE SUMMER of 2007, Britain was close to crashing. A few onlookers realised the danger, but Britain's political leaders were not among them. Politicians and civil servants boasted that the City's economy was booming because of their 'light-touch regulation' of workers in financial services whose number included potential frauds. Curiously, they never argued that the inner-city economy might boom if there was 'light touch regulation' of workers in the ghettos whose number included potential drug dealers. And artists produced works to match the times. On the same day that Lehman Brothers went bankrupt, the genial Damien Hirst auctioned at Sotheby's pieces he admitted had been mass produced in his studios and buyers still gave him GBP100 million. Even the critics did not pretend to be interested in what message, if any, Hirst had for his audience, but reported the sale like business reporters covering a soaring stock. For 10 years New Labour stood cross-eyed in admiration as London was turned into the centre of the financial universe.From the sand bags Nick Cohen has watched as they turned their back on the working class, once the object of Utopian hopes on the Left and unreasonable fears on the Right, and lovingly embraced the upper class, once the object of surly contempt on the Left. In Waiting for the Etonians are gathered his selected writings that cover the span of Labour's love affair with the Right and the moral hazard that it has culminated in. It is a romance which has not only broken its traditional bond with the working classes and undermined the very values on which the party was founded, but has now left it with little more to do than warm the seat for the next Conservative Prime Minister.
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