Eurovision And World Unity

The old emblem for the European Broadcasting Union
Source
A vectorized illustration made by Aatox with a low resolution screenshot as a guide. Will be removed on request

As a small child I found the idea of the European Broadcasting Union quite exciting and futuristic. To me, it presaged a future, probably to the soundtrack of ‘Telstar’, of world unity and Thunderbirds. The reality, of course, is of a rather unexciting collection of bland songs which only seem to stand a chance of winning if they include a lot of nonsense mouth music or are in English. This makes me wonder whether, if the human race ever did achieve unity, it would be through blandness rather than anything particularly visionary.

In ‘Are The Illuminati The Good Guys?’, I note that the Illuminati-based conspiracy theory, since it’s a concern held mainly by conservative fundamentalist Christians, actually depicts quite a positive world from anything other than a fairly paleoconservative perspective (neoconservatives are in a sense actually doing it), although there is the money issue. It isn’t clear to me why someone not involved in an area where they benefit from conflict such as the arms trade would prefer the world not to be unified in some way, except that there are in fact good reasons for not wanting it. If there is only one state across the whole of the human race, there is no genuine way to opt out of it, and if you believe government is legitimised by consent, this becomes problematic and means that world government can become despotic. There’s nobody else to police them, sanction them or do anything else to keep them in check. Then again, maybe there isn’t now either.

The idea of a global political union, or World State, seemed to be particularly popular in the inter-war period, clearly stimulated in the European mind by the horrors of the Great War. Hence ‘Brave New World’ and its dystopian baby factories with standardised human beings, and of course the case which comes to mind most for me, Stapledon’s various depictions of a unified species including the First World State. Stapledon contrasts the more visionary version of globalism with what he sees as the more likely outcome. After a series of increasingly brutal wars between 1914 and 2300, an American businessman and Chinese man whose identity isn’t entirely clear sit down together on a Pacific island and conspire to overthrow the Chinese and American governments, thereby achieving world unity led by a World Financial Directorate. This continues for five thousand years until fossil fuel resources are exhausted and civilisation collapses into a hundred millennium long stone age. The big issue with the World State as it came about in the ‘Last And First Men’ timeline is that it was not really spiritually aspirational but substituted dishonest pseudo-spiritual and pseudo-scientific frippery, and was motivated by a desperate desire for unity and the end of war without any higher aim in mind. It’s a little concerning to me that those do actually sound like fairly high aims and that makes me wonder if we have indeed lost something. Aldous Huxley’s world state is similarly vacuous, and like Stapledon’s version contrasts spirituality and authenticity with the ethos of the state, although interestingly Huxley also has religious-like rituals within the world state and portrays the superstition of the Savage Reservations as equally unhelpful.

Hence the vacuity of the Eurovision Song Contest? Is banality the path to world unity? In fact it seems the contest isn’t so much about unity as a seething mass of political undercurrents generated by international enmity, but even if it is, I suppose it’s better that they fight through song rather than bullets. Maybe there should be a Palestinian entry.

Another organisation touted to us as children as a step towards world unity was the British Commonwealth. This probably follows a similar attitude taken towards the British Empire a few decades previously. I remember seeing a non-Mercator map projected from a slide by a man from Afrika talking about the way this confederation was the beginning of the end of individual nation-states. From this I get the impression that the idea of the Commonwealth back then was much more popular globally, at least within it, that it is now, and I can also see that such a disparate collection of countries could be a positive influence on each other to introduce some kind of fairness. However, in fact this doesn’t seem to be how it operates. In the late ’50s, the British government considered inviting the Common Market countries to join the Commonwealth but nothing came of it. That would’ve been interesting as the current population of the British Commonwealth is 2 419 million and the EU’s is 450 million, so that would’ve made it the largest political entity on the planet. However, the two are very different today, and it seems really that the Commonwealth has kind of failed. It seems to have no function, has always seemed quite vague to me, and it also seems to hark back to the imperial age, although I suppose it could also be seen as an attempt to make amends for it. One of the unfortunate aspects of British attitudes towards it was the racism shown to immigrants from the New Commonwealth, which was a factor in making it less popular here. France made many of its former colonies a full part of the nation itself, and this sounds like it would’ve been a better approach, particularly if the Common Market had in fact ended up joining or the UK as a global, discontinuous nation, perhaps with its capital in India, had joined that organisation in such a form.

Now for the EU. As I’ve said before, I’m only very reluctantly in favour of this organisation. My biggest problem with it is that it is not a federal republic. It seems to me that it would be to the advantage of people within Europe for this continent to become a single nation, economically and politically. If it was a republic with proportional representation, it would also mean that Britain itself would be more democratic. However, they chose not to go in that direction, but instead to promote its power as a relatively non-accountable economic entity which sets low standards for working and encourages trade across the entire sub-continent, and let’s remember that Europe is not a continent any more than “Sub-Saharan Africa” is physically beneath the Sahara. As it stands, the EU is disturbingly similar to Oswald Mosley’s white homeland. GIven the United States’ attitude towards its southern border, even if the EU did become a federal republic it could easily behave as badly as the US. The union is a neoliberal club, not particularly accountable as far as I can tell, consisting substantially of faded imperial powers which have plundered and oppressed the rest of the world historically and are now continuing to do so by other means. However, the alternative this country is now committed to is remarkably similar, making me wonder what the point of leaving was in the first place. Presumably there’s a subtle distinction which makes the conditions for the poor even worse than they are already, which is presumably why we’re out. Nonetheless, I am in favour of being in a real EU because I think it would be better than being in a constitutional monarchy with a nobility and first-past-the-post electoral system and nothing to counteract that, although I’m also aware that a European government would probably end up giving a lot of power to the extreme right because of the situation in eastern Europe, so from a pragmatic perspective it may be better for women and many minorities in Western Europe, but most emphatically not Eastern, that this is not the situation. Therefore it’s a question of wanting an independent Scotland to rejoin the EU, but being very unenthusiastic about the whole thing.

Then there’s the UN. Like the EU, this was founded in the wake of the Second World War, and is much criticised. The funding is uneven and whoever has the gold makes the rules. Opinions I’m familiar with on the UN range from the belief that it’s well-intentioned but biassed towards the perpetrators of imperialism to the belief that it’s entirely oriented towards pursuing neo-colonialism by other means. There’s presumably a more sympathetic view but I’m not familiar with it.

There are other ways in which globalism or internationalism are being approached. One example is Antarctica, which is internationally agreed to be off-limits to territorial claims. Another is “Outer Space”, as they call it, i.e. everywhere except here, which again is governed by a treaty ruling out territorial claims. Finally, there are international waters, which is most of the planet’s surface. Consequently we could almost say that the majority of the world is already united. International waters, more legally known as the “high seas”, are actually smaller than one might expect at only fifty percent of the planet’s surface, leaving almost as big an area as the land surface as territorial at 21%. Antarctica is the second smallest continent, after Australia and ignoring Europe, comprising 8.9% of the land surface, but that’s just enough to nudge the portion of Earth’s surface not belonging to anyone over fifty percent. As far as the sea is concerned, there’s a twelve mile limit and a two hundred mile exclusive economic zone, which is often shared because of coastlines often being less than four hundred miles apart. Here in the “U”K we have the current dispute between the Channel Isles and France going on, the idea of a maritime border with Ireland and in recent history the Cod War. Of course if we were all vegan we wouldn’t’ve had the Cod War or the dispute with the Channel Isles. Just saying. Vessels and structures in or on the high seas are governed by the countries governing them, and there’s also something called universal jurisdiction, which means that any government can consider itself responsible for policing such things as smuggling and people trafficking. The problem with this, of course, is that countries have different laws. To me, it isn’t clear if landlocked countries are technically allowed to do this. Then there’s the UN Convention on the Law Of The Sea, which replaced the previous idea of the Freedom of the Seas. This seems to be substantially connected to the idea of what is territory rather than what isn’t, so for example it tends to emphasise continental shelves as belonging to particular countries, which makes British “territory” considerably larger, I’m guessing more than twice the size of the land surface, than it would be otherwise. It also means that the United Nations seems to be operating with tacit consent as a state would. The absurdity of the British continental shelf and the fact that by this convention we simply have no room for a meaningful exclusive economic zone between us and France illustrates the absurdity that, should the EU exist in the first place, we wouldn’t be part of it, in purely geographic terms. There’s also a massive hole in the EU between the German Ocean and Ireland.

Beyond that is Outer Space, a term which sounds quite 1950s to me, which is above the  Kármán Line, a spheroid which I presume is a hundred kilometres higher, and therefore wider, than sea level. I presume also that it follows the geoid and is not influenced by the likes of mountains or basins. Otherwise Bolivia would be able to claim that certain objects impinge on its airspace. I’ve always thought the Kármán Line was a bit low, because the atmosphere continues for hundreds of kilometres beyond it, and simply merges into cis lunar space. It’s at about the level aurora polaris occurs and is in the low thermosphere. Much thought has been given to the question of what happens to politics in space, notably by Iain Banks, who makes a couple of salient points. One is that space has three extensive dimensions rather than the two we often consider territory to involve, meaning that it’s not as easy to surround a sphere of influence as it would be on the land surface of a planet. This is a game changer. Consider, for example, three-dimensional Go. Another is the necessary self-sufficiency and difficulty in policing a distant outpost of people. If a group of people are pioneers, that entails that in order to assert control over them, the nation state would have to develop an equally advanced method of getting to them. Psychological control is of course possible, and might be the answer. However, we don’t need to consider these questions as it’s unlikely anyone will ever again leave Low Earth Orbit. I explored the issue of coercion in space in my story ‘Packed Away’, which depicted an astrophysicist renting her spleen off her employer, having had all her bone marrow removed and body fat converted to soap, which would of course be sold back to her for a reasonable charge. I’m not convinced nowadays that Iain Banks got it right, but it’s only a technicality so far as I can tell because it is never going to happen.

This brings me to what seem to be the most successful international organisations on this planet, the multinational companies. I want to make my position clear on these. They are not evil, but the reason for that is that evil is not, at least in human terms, a significant problem in comparison with indifference and insensitivity to people’s and the planet’s needs. The functions of a MNC are growth, survival and profit. They are, like cancer, dysfunctional and not related to the needs of the body, i.e. the planet. As such, they are successful in the short term although in their current form, i.e. neither nationalised nor coöperative, or at least some other rational and democratic form of organisation, they will guarantee the extinction of the species. For some reason people don’t see this as a problem. One thing they do, though, is prove that globalism is feasible, because in fact we live in a globalised world. Recalling Stapledon’s World State, the multinationals basically ran everything, but he failed to appreciate how much damage we could do to the biosphere in the short term, so for us this situation merely allows them to preside over our demise as a species.

Another global vision can be found in the form of the Caliphate. or خِلَافَة This is of course an Islamic vision of Shari`a law being general and applying to the whole species, or at least every Muslim. To someone with liberal values, this sounds undesirable, but I don’t feel I can comment on this from an informed perspective even though I’ve written a degree-level dissertation on Islamic society. Although it may be valid to focus on the patriarchy and homophobia of Shari`a, it shouldn’t be forgotten either that it would not be capitalist, because of the absence of usury, and the existence of zakat also provides a social security system. Probably the longer I talk about this the more likely I am to say something crass.

Related to Islam is of course Judaism, and sometimes I’ve wondered if the solution to the Israel-Palestine issue is to have a secular world government based in Jerusalem. Inherited from Jewish Zionism is the Christian idea of the Kingdom of God, which seems to be articulated fairly well by the Jehovah’s Witnesses, one of whose apostates described it as a world where everyone is vegan and speaks Esperanto. To a limited extent, this sounds good to me. Veganism is unequivocally a good thing. Esperanto has the issue of being somewhat Western in form, having imponderable grammar, as with its six participles, sexist vocabulary and no attention to sandhi. However, many non-Westerners seem entirely happy with it.

Then there’s Pan-Africanism (sic). This is the idea that those of Afrikan descent have common interests and should be unified. There is a slight problem with this concept in that technically everyone is of Afrikan descent, but of course some of us are more recently so than others. There are also many people who have no idea they have relatively recent Afrikan descent. I can’t pretend to know too much about pan-Africanism, but it seems to me to have two major issues. One is that it seems to erase cultural differences which could be important to the people concerned, because the continent is vast and extremely varied. The other, and this is not necessarily a negative point, is that the identity of Afrikans are defined here in opposition to imperialism alone, which seems pragmatic but possibly rather Western-centred. This, like the Caliphate, is something I’m culturally distant from. The narrow view of Pan-Africanism is the idea of a unified Afrikan homeland a little like a vast version of Israel, to which all people of (presumably recent) Afrikan descent have a right of return. One possible reason for the rather culturally homogenous idea is that the ideology is significantly influenced by Afrikan-American thinkers. Once again, the longer I talk about this the more likely I am to say something racist, so I will stop at this point.

There is a final way in which world unity has been approached: extremely large countries, either in area or population. These would currently include India, China, Russia, Canada, the United States, Australia, Nigeria, Indonesia, Pakistan and Brazil. If the EU were a state, it would also be on this list and given its wealth also a potential superpower, so it’s a little surprising it isn’t also unified for all the wrong reasons. Among these Australia is unique in being a nation which is also a continent, not forgetting Tasmania, although its population is very low and Papua and parts of Indonesia also count as being part of Sahul, the name for the complete continent including the continental shelf. Several of these territories seem to constitute a kind of “land grab”, since Canada and Russia both have very sparse populations over most of their area, as does Australia, and the same could be said of Brazil, the western part of China and even parts of the US. I sometimes contemplate the idea of a United States of North America, including Canada, the US, Greenland and Mexico, with a rather un-American culture where there is for example no death penalty, stringent gun control, proportional representation and a wider range of mainstream political parties. In other words, more like Western Europe. This would of course be very unpopular with some American citizens, and there is a converse idea, particularly in science fiction, of the world basically becoming America, which is also Olaf Stapledon’s vision, though in his case not a positive one.

Contrasting Zion, the Caliphate and the Kingdom of God illustrates a problem with the idea of one world government: there are different visions of the same thing depending on where in the world one comes from. This is not very encouraging. It seems appropriate to end this survey with a quote from Martin Luther King Jr: “We live together as rational human beings or die together as fools.” So in fact world unity probably isn’t far off. We will achieve it as part of our post-apocalyptic condition, which is due to set in any day now.

The Youth Of Today

There’s an Ancient Greek play, maybe by Aristophanes, where a market trader complains about the young people of his day, that they no longer show the respect he used to in his youth and so forth. I haven’t seen it, so I can’t really go into much detail, but it’s telling how the exact same sentiments could be expressed more than two thousand years later. This strongly suggests that the youth of today are in no way more “snowflaky”, feckless, disrespectful or lazy than any other youth of any other day.

Were I to be asked, I would probably say that youth is the period from about eighteen to twenty-five, although the duodecimal system also provides quite a nice division from twelve to twenty-four which conveniently ends at the age when the brain stops growing. Anyway, for me, the first version of that would’ve been from 1985 to 1993, which spans the period between just before I left home to just after I got married. At that point, the norm for English middle-class youth would be that after they did their A-levels at an FE college or a sixth form from sixteen to eighteen, they would leave home and either get a job straight out of school or go to university, polytechnic or an HE college in a distant town or city, study a degree for three years living in a Hall of Residence or private rented accommodation from a small-scale landlord while receiving a grant, then hopefully get a well-paid professional job before settling down and getting married in their mid-twenties and probably paying a mortgage and becoming a homeowner. This situation was the norm from probably soon after the War until 1989, after which various processes changed things, notably the Tory introduction of student loans, followed by various other happenings, which in fact didn’t do a lot of natural Conservative voters much good, such as the replacement of small private landlords by massive private firms building new student accommodation, which incidentally is how this blog started. Yet for some reason, it doesn’t seem to put them off voting for them, and because the older generation is more likely to vote Conservative, this also leads to them complaining about the Youth of Today when in fact it’s the policies of the party they voted for that led to them being put in their current position. I presume that their response would be that it results from their own laziness and might attribute the cause to the policies of New Labour and their effect on schooling and parenting, although this is now beginning to recede into the past and put the Government in a similar position to that of the Tories in the late ’90s after what proved to be eighteen years of the same party in power.

What we have now, in any case, is the “Boomerang” phenomenon of young people either leaving home for university and returning to live with their parents, not uncommonly into their thirties, which of course means they no longer count as youth. Since more students go to university locally now, this means in turn that they may not leave home at all. Those of us of a certain vintage may be tempted to see this as a backwards step, but in fact it bears some resemblance to life before the Great Transformation, when life stages consisted not so much of childhood, youth and adulthood as the stages before and after marriage, and before it they would probably have lived with their parents. The causes of this are multiple, but include low wages and internships, high rent, fragile romantic relationships and a precarious job market. Three and a half million single young people in the UK are now thought to live with their parents, up one third over the last decade. Research at Loughborough University has led to the claim that this situation is now permanent. The statistics break down as follows:

  • 71% of single adults in their early twenties live at home.
  • 54% are still with their parents in their late twenties.
  • 33% are still there in their early thirties.

I should probably point out at this point that Covid-19 has exacerbated this trend due to such factors as job losses, the restriction on higher education and banning people from moving home, and the takeaway from this is that although the pandemic probably means the data and research are obsolete, it would have accelerated the trend. Stagnating wages and insecure employment would do the same. In 1996, 55% of twenty-five to thirty-four year olds were “home owners” (actually meaning they were paying mortgages and therefore effectively renting their houses off banks or building societies). By 2016, this had fallen to 34% and there’s no reason to suppose it won’t fall further. To spell out the causes, they amount to rising property prices and low incomes for young people as well as their perception that they’re in debt (see the other blog post for an explanation of that description of the situation).

At the same time as all of this, and probably in connection with some aspects of the boomerang situation or its causes, mental illness has famously reached epidemic proportions among young adults. Between 2007 and 2018, universities reported a fivefold increase in disclosure of mental health conditions from 9 675 to 57 305 despite a fairly small rise in student numbers. This may be partly caused by an increased willingness of young people to talk about their feelings, but there are ways of disentangling the underlying reality from that possibility. For a rather younger age group of thirteen to sixteen year olds, A&E admissions for self-harm rose 68%. One in ten children and young people are estimated to have mental health problems and 70% do not receive sufficiently early intervention. Typical problems in that cohort are depression, generalised anxiety disorder and conduct disorder.

As a break for the unrelenting gloom I suspect this post is emanating, possible ways of helping this situation include good physical health, being part of a well-functioning family, taking part in local activities having the chance to enjoy themselves, hope, optimism, the opportunity to learn, feeling loved, trusted, valued and safe, accepting who they are, a sense of agency and belonging, knowing what they’re good at and resilience.

Risk factors for mental health issues in young people would include the opposite of all of those, and also such things as bullying, being a carer for an infirm adult such as a parent who is also physically or mentally ill, long term educational problems, poverty, homelessness, being in a group subject to prejudice, bereavement, a family history of mental illness (note that this is multiplicative because of the aspect of being a carer along with environmental factors of other kinds and genetics) and parental separation. I would contend that many of these risks are greater due to government policy, and before you go thinking I’m blaming the Tories I would also include Blair’s and Brown’s terms and the policies made under them in that, for example in education. But clearly the crisis in the NHS, rise in homelessness and the creation of a world fit for no-one in the past decade don’t help.

The results include PTSD, generalised anxiety disorders, eating disorders, self-harm and depression, and an environment in which ADHD is seen as a problem, or maybe I should say a disabling environment which fails to make the most of or accommodate people with ADHD. This brings me to the first organisation I want to link to: PAPYRUS. This is a charity aiming to prevent young people ending their lives, and it gives the following advice regarding helping people avoid doing this: listen non-judgementally, don’t be afraid to mention the S-word, be direct, try to stay calm. One young person in four has had suicidal ideation, so it’s common and this may help break down the taboo, and mentioning it won’t provoke them into doing it by giving them the idea because they’ve already had it. It can happen to anyone and you aren’t expected to solve the problem. You might want to pass them on to a professional who can help.

CALM is another group aiming to help men with depression. 75% of people who kill themselves are male. I don’t have much to say about it than that.

Then there’s the issue of Pathological Social Withdrawal or ひきこもり- hikikomori, and at this point I need to make a bit of a digression because before I go into this I need to point out the issue of 日本人論 – Nihonjiron, or Japanese exceptionalism. Nihonjiron translates as “Japanese Theory” and is something which both certain Japanese and Westerners are keen on to an extent which could be seen as nationalist from within and racist from without. There is a cluster of hypotheses intended to support the idea that Japan is unique, to the extent that in extreme cases it’s even been claimed that the Japanese people are descended from different primates than the rest of the human race. It is true that East Asians have more Neanderthal DNA than other people but this probably isn’t what they mean and doesn’t amount to them specifically having a radically different genetic makeup. The Japanese are seen as an isolated island race, ethnically homogenous (they aren’t, because of the Ainu for example), having a unique language (it’s a linguistic isolate but has a lot in common with other SOV languages and drops pronouns in a similar way to the Chinese dialects, and also has some features in common with Korean, to which it was thought to be related) which leads to a fusion of the ego with others, and social structures which are filial rather than “horizontal” (e.g. tiger parenting and not wanting to disappoint one’s parents and grandparents). Of course Japan has various features which are unusual, although I tend to think many of them are shared with Britain, but there’s an element of caricature and looking at the Japanese people as if they’re laboratory specimens to me in some of this, and it can be very unhelpful not to recognise the commonalities which also exist, one of which is hikikomori, also known, perhaps more helpfully, as Pathological Social Withdrawal. This is not to ignore the particular pressures Japanese youth find themselves under, but please remember that the following description tends to apply more broadly than just in Japan.

Hikikomori literally means “pulling inward”. The textbook case is of someone who has for a long time stayed in their room all day and doesn’t socialise. The situation began in the 1990s with the Japanese recession, and affects 1.2% of the Japanese population. It’s often precipitated by perceived academic failure or inability to get a particular job. However, it isn’t confined to young people and is also found throughout the adult life span and has another peak late in life. There may be connections with depression, autism, agoraphobia and social anxiety. Parents often need to devote a fair bit of time and energy to ensure the long term security of their children. Help is often unavailable because by its very nature the problem is hidden, and there’s also the usual problem of it not being dramatic or visible, like many situations of poor mental health. I imagine that attempts to model the English education, or rather schooling, system on those of the Far East really don’t help with the situation here. But we need to recognise that this is not a uniquely Japanese problem and that it exists here in Northwestern Europe.

To finish, I want to address one more issue which is sometimes mentioned in connection with depression: the question of exercise. A few years ago, an academic investigation into the relationship between exercise and addressing depression was undertaken which appeared to demonstrate that it didn’t help. Two groups were surveyed over a one year period, one of which had pharmaceutical and counselling and the other of which had both plus information on exercise opportunities. The problem with this study is that it ignores the issue of psychomotor retardation. The problem is motivation and the sheer physical ability to exercise at all. One feature of depression and several other illnesses, including schizophrenia, Parkinson’s disease, generalised anxiety disorder and disordered eating (and I feel the need to add here that thinking of illnesses as entities in themselves may not be particularly respectful of people diagnosed as mentally ill but I have a lot of plates spinning here), is reduced physical movement and slowed thinking. This can lead to empathy breaking down because someone who is not suffering this, and perhaps never has, apparently easy, everyday tasks are not done, and it may also appear to them that this is an easily overcome problem. This is of course part of the famous “snap out of it” idea of depression, that it’s an easily solved problem and almost sinful in nature. You can’t expect someone who literally cannot even get out of bed to spend any time on a gym treadmill or going for a run.

To use a cliché, the current situation is a perfect storm for young adults. The political situation has led to difficulty in holding down or even getting paid work, affording accommodation or, at the moment, even getting out of the house. There’s also an epidemic in mental illness within that age group for a number of reasons, and it should also be borne in mind that they are, as far as they’re concerned, facing a potentially grim prospect regarding the state of the planet which their predecessors don’t seem interested in doing anything about at all. Many of them would therefore also withdraw. So I suppose what I’m saying is, don’t blame them. Much of this is the doing of the previous generations and we are not used to living in their world.