Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Wolves at the door

Hittite Jar. Hattusa. 13th century BC

The wolves have come
Come howling from the moor
Howling scratch the bare wood door
I hear their paws in snow
Hear their whines and chatter
And tremble in the cold.

Alone, down to lamb bones
And boiling broth
Down to scraps they did not save for rope
Down to comfort sought
In the remorseless winter
Chorus of wolves.

They will come again tonight
Certain as sunrise
Again tomorrow.
Past christmas now
Past the season of feast and gifts
Past generosities.

What is to be made
Of lamb bones and old rope
Of empty pots
Of spotless knives and spoons?

The wolves have come to my door
In cold I will not tremble
Or worry over circled tracks
Worry for their whining
They are welcome back.

The wolves have come to my door
Tomorrow I trade fur.

Letter to some editors


Dear Editor,

Nigel Farage's call for greater direct democracy is welcome.

However government today is as much about spending as legislation and traditional ideas of democracy did not face this problem.

Public spending has grown forty fold since the beginning of last century.
(http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Documents/quarterlybulletin/threecenturiesofdata.xls)

A novel form of direct democracy in a digital age would be to give citizens input into public spending decisions.

The elected government should publish its spending plans immediately after the general election. Then allowed a period for citizens to adjust each budget line by some precentage.

This would make our democracy more inclusive, less a la carte, political promises more binding and politicians more focused on persuading the electorate to back policies, rather than making empty promises to secure office.

Further, mandating policies might allow the retention of budgets within the civil service and end the incentive to profiligacy that comes from having to spend or return budgets within a year.

The next general election falls on the eight hundreth anniversary of the Magna Carta, which created parliament for the purpose of overseeing the Sovereign's tax and spending.

Representation may have been the best option 800 years ago, but the web now allows us to publish and collect feedback at little cost.

British innovation in governance was a competitive advantage for centuries. We should again focus Britain's “unique moral genius” on the issue of governance, harness the wisdom of crowds and use National Participatory Budgeting to build a more inclusive, more efficient and more direct democracy.