Today, the Daily Mail
brings
deeply unsettling news for its devoted readers: starting next week, the
paper will serialise the supposedly Very Wonderful memoirs of their talentless
and unfunny churnalist Richard Littlejohn. The modestly-titled “Littlejohn’s Lost World” tells of a time
when everyone worked hard and wanted to get on, there were none of those
immigrants, and no elf’n’safety.
History, guv? Make it up, nobody'll know, innit?!?
Ah, how wonderful that must have been – not. Fortunately,
being of A Certain Age, I am able to subject Dicky Windbag’s hot air to the
harsh reality of factual analysis. So let’s start at the very beginning – a very
good place to start. “The Mail's
incomparable columnist, born before welfare dependence, immigration and
elf'n'safety asks: 'What would my old Dad make of the country we've become?'”
he asks.
Well, in Dick’s case, what he has become is a peddler of
rank dishonesty: the Welfare State pre-dates his birth, as does significant
immigration. Or did he miss events like the arrival at Tilbury of the Empire
Windrush? He does get one thing right, though: rationing was still in force
when he was born. But it ended before Winshton retired as PM and Anthony Eden
won the 1955 General Election.
“In those days, most
babies were born at home, not in hospital” he says, from his own particular
Sample Of One. Well, Dicky Boy, my Sample Of One from later in the same year
somewhere near Leeds says otherwise. “I
was born into a lost world. It wasn’t just another century, it was another
country”. Wrong. It was the same country as today, but we have in the
meantime enjoyed something called progress.
What Littlejohn fails to tell readers about the wonderful
fifties is that life expectancy was poor – heart disease killed many before
they got the chance to retire, lung cancer and other respiratory ailments took
more, and tuberculosis was rampant. He (and I) were the fortunate ones. And don’t
get me started on the filthy air in cities and towns – and the illnesses that caused in its turn.
Dick tells that “no
one suffered from now-fashionable food allergies”. Yes they did – only back
then, they fell ill or just dropped dead. “Holidays
meant a trip to Southend in a Ford Anglia” he says, which meant his family
were not as ordinary as he would like to pretend: very few could afford a car.
And where would you prefer to take a holiday – Essex or Andalucia? Seriously?
If I were given a choice of the 50s or the here and now, it
would be a no-brainer. The world today has its faults, but has changed vastly –
and for the better. This is my time, thanks. The 50s are mere memory. “Critics of my column in the Daily Mail probably won’t be surprised to discover
that I’m descended from a family of London cabbies” says Dick. Meaning a
bigoted and dishonest gobshite.
And an appallingly selective and unreliable witness to the
past. One more for the bin.
4 comments:
Littlejohn Senior, circa 1936: 'Ere, d'you know oo I 'ad in the back of me cab last week? That Oswald Mosley, that's 'oo. Great bloke, spoke like what we do darn in the Pony and Trap Inn. Bloody Joos, comin' over 'ere an' takin' our jobs. An' do you know wot? They slit animals' froats wivout stunnin' 'em first. Barbaric that's wot. An' they won't 'ave no bacon butties in their caffs. Make no mistake mush, yer wouldn't catch me in one of their caffs, s'all kosher this 'n' kosher tha' an' all.
Anywhichwayup, did you 'ear abart them lefties 'oo tried to stop Oswald an' 'is mates 'avvin a quiet stroll through their own city. Just cos tha's where the Joos live the lefties kicked up.
I remember when I was a lad back in the 1890s Britain was Great Britain not 'ow it is now. My ol' man was in the trenches y'know and 'e never came back, shot for desertion some say but 'is mates in the firin' squad were proud to have shot 'im they reckons. An' 'e would not recognise the place now people can't speak their minds can they?.
Where d'yer wanna go then mate? Eh, fuck orf, tha's sarf of the river...
And, of course, the much maligned "elf and safety" has ensured there are far, far fewer industrial accidents than there were back in the bad old 1950's
Smog
47 kids in my primary school class
No car; no fridge
Coal hole in the kitchen
Mind you I did live north of Watford then.
Perhaps if he worked in a real industry instead of newspapers he might have been glad of some safety rules. Here in Crewe we still have "Crewe Works disease" funerals every week adding to the hundreds and hundreds of others over the past couple of decades. Maybe we should have a memorial erected.
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