Peter Hitchens: From Covid to Culture Wars — The Left’s Long March Through UK Institutions is Complete
- The New Culture Forum Channel
In the earliest stages of Covid-19, Peter Hitchens was one of the few public voices who was opposed to the lockdown and the tactics that were being employed. As time has proved him correct, he regrets but is not surprised that he has not been afforded greater media exposure during this crisis.
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He thinks it absurd that there has been so little proper criticism or opposition to the government’s measures and that journalists are so placid in their questioning of ministers. Most of these meausres are neither proportionate nor of much use, yet the public have embraced them wholeheartedly. This he believes is akin to doing things out of supersitition.
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The government, he argues, has embarked on the biggest and most expensive propaganda campaign in peacetime, to concince the British public to commit acts of enormous self harm that were wholly disproportionate and unjustifiable in relation to the severity of the pandemic.
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He wonders what lies ahead for transport and big cities if people are no longer commuting in to city centres and if office space declines, with all the knock-on effects that will have for businesses that depend on offices and office workers.
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He points out that no-one should be surprised by public institutions such as the National Trust and British Library becoming involved in political controversies such as Black Lives Matter. This was always going to be the result once the left had completed its “Long March” through the institutions. The left’s silent revolution is a fait accompli, and now they are enacting and reacting in accordance with their ideology.
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He explains that much of the current “social justice” and culture war problems we see today originates in the Equalities Act of 2010, an Act brought in by the Labour Government but one which the Conservative Party — which by this point had become a Blairite Party led by the Blairite David Cameron — did little to oppose.
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“If I were under 30 I’d have left (Britain) long ago”, Hitchens states. “I’ve never seen a country more finished — and I’ve seen some finished countries.” The problem Britain faces is that with our 2 party system (which Hitchens supports), it is impossible for a new party to rise up until there is a vacancy. This is how the Labour Party emerged to replace the Liberal Party — and this is the only way that the Conservative Party or Labour Party will in turn be replaced.
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