Mr Blond goes to Washington
David Blackburn 3:51pm
The Red Tory, Phillip Blond, is spreading the faith in the States. The New York Times’s David Brooks is impressed, very impressed. In fact, he is a proselytising convert.
‘Britain is always going to be more hospitable to communitarian politics than the more libertarian U.S. But people are social creatures here, too. American society has been atomized by the twin revolutions here, too. This country, too, needs a fresh political wind. America, too, is suffering a devastating crisis of authority. The only way to restore trust is from the local community on up.’
Blond’s premise is unanswerable – the twin revolutions of left (prescriptive rights) and right (free market liberalism) have, perversely, centralised power. Everything is highly contestable.
First, Blond has an advanced case of David Miliband Syndrome: he expresses himself exclusively with meaningless abstractions:
'In order to reclaim a civilised society, market and state should not be regarded as the ultimate goal or expression of humanity...We can create a civic economy based on trust, sustainability and reciprocity.'
Markets are Blond’s schtick. From what I can gather he’s agin ‘em. He fixates on what he perceives as the ‘unprecedented reduction of market diversity and plurality’. The Luddites would object to the idea this is 'unprecedented', and the prosperity of all that followed them undermines the assertion that a ‘reduction of diversity’ entrenches poverty. But Blond is unperturbed. He argues that local shops should be protected from larger competitors through co-ops, mutualism and state intervention when necessary.
It’s deeply conflicted thinking. Consumers are at their most powerful in a genuinely competitive and well policed market. Blond’s ideas don’t address competition; they simply replace corporatism with mutualism. Rooted in an Enid Blyton historical fantasy of cottage industries, Blond would manipulate and skew markets. He’s attracted reams of criticism. Iain Martin’s and Alex Massie’s critiques are essential reading. Perhaps Blond’s sojourn in the States reflects his growing isolation in conservative circles.



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charles hercock
March 19th, 2010 4:08pm Report this commentThe David Milliband syndrome = Honest Hubris.This chap is one of our gems
paulg
March 19th, 2010 4:16pm Report this commentThere has to be a cut off point the majority of us do not want to be co-oped into a mutalist society. However, there are large scale areas of deprevation and, mutualism in housing and getting people economically active has to be better than leaving people to rot.
djw2009
March 19th, 2010 4:41pm Report this commentThat's the last thing the US needs - yet another Commie masquerading as a conservative...
M. Rowley
March 19th, 2010 4:56pm Report this commentLet's hope he bought a one-way ticket.
Walsingham's Ghost
March 19th, 2010 4:56pm Report this comment"Perhaps Blond’s sojourn in the States reflects his growing isolation in conservative circles."
With any luck he will stay there - the 'cousins' are welcome to the pompous oaf...
WG
cityboozer
March 19th, 2010 5:22pm Report this comment"Rooted in an Enid Blyton historical fantasy of cottage industries"
All is revealed: he's a fat Gandhi.
Stephen Isabirye
March 19th, 2010 6:13pm Report this comment"Rooted in an Enid Blyton historical fantasy of cottages," well I am glad to inform you that I have published a book on Enid Blyton, titled, The Famous Five: A Personal anecdotage (www.bbotw.com).
Stephen Isabirye
TGF UKIP
March 19th, 2010 7:17pm Report this commentRemembering how this clown was embraced and feted by Dave, this is strong stuff for the fanzine, David Blackburn. I fear at least one of your senior your colleagues will not be talking to you after this. Tch.tch!
For some of us though, Blond is vivid confirmation of the wisdom of our intention not to vote for the Notting Hill Tories.
Beer Moth
March 19th, 2010 9:59pm Report this commentToo many 'toos', Mr Brooks.
Tim Carpenter LPUK
March 20th, 2010 9:25am Report this commentThe man appears to want mutualism "or else".
Voluntary collectivism is fine, a great thing even, but the secret is in the first word - Voluntary. Once you interfere, once you create distortions, "encouragement" or even coerce people to end companies and form/join collectives you move towards Authoritarianism, and this sits neatly within Communitarianism.
A pox upon it before it becomes a pox upon us!
Frank P
March 20th, 2010 1:52pm Report this comment" Rooted in an Enid Blyton historical fantasy of cottage industries"
Yerrss! He does rather look as though he may have been rooted during a hysterical and industrious fantasy in a cottage (but only in his college salad days - of course).
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