Monday 30 December 2019

Left with the sea


Subject: Left with the sea.

How stupid how short sighted I was last year to grumble about the inconvenience of a walk into the town centre.  Now, only 12 months later I can't walk the distance or even drive after dark because one eye has stopped working, which makes night driving difficult and my ankle has packed up, making the walk painful. 
"The Tyranny of expectations" one could call it.  The expectation that things will go on as before without giving much thought as to the components in ones life that make it so.
Health is a particular component on which most other things hinge. One can accommodate the economic variables fairly easily, one can adjust ones spending or modify the assumption that holidays or a new TV are necessary, one can even find pleasure in simplifying ones life style, discarding the old for a new edition of what is meaningful. But health is on a whole different level of importance it's the linchpin pin to who we are and the way we see ourselves.  A lifetime of walking without a thought as to the physical parts which come into play when you get the thought into your mind, 'I want to go there'. The assumption that you will always be able to is fundamental to our sense of self, take away the ability and one loses part of ones esteem.
Now I'm not talking of the Steven Hawkins's dreadful incapacity, Motor Neurones Disease or the equally dreadful Asbestosis where every breath is an effort of survival and there are many people wracked with such pain I can't  imagine how they continue to want to live, or the millions cast into a dark place by mental illness. No I am thinking more of an inconvenience, a curtailment of past accomplishments, a realignment of ones thinking and especially of ones "expectations".
The old adage, 'do it while you can' is never taken seriously since we are blessed to see ourselves in the clothes of the past, doing and achieving, much as before until some how, undefined, we can't. For instance dementia like cancer creeps up out of nowhere, the signs are minimal, almost understandable as we adjust to ageing, the difficulty in remembering or making sense of the progression of thoughts in some sort of cognisant way is normal to ageing but it's when the normal slips into the abnormal then ones expectations take on a whole new meaning.
So one day you are the old version of you, the one who wore many name tags, (not all of them to your liking) but who could trace a history of achievement and failure and who, if you are lucky, you quite liked and defended. Suddenly the mechanism missed a beat and then another, nothing much to worry about that day but as the days progressed the old becomes replaced by the new and even the new is is a work in progress. Deep down the system is beginning to fail. Like the main engine on a ship, the sum of all its parts enables it to reach port, its loosing more steam than it is generating, its having to work harder to overcome the friction in the prop shaft and  as the ship slows to a halt in mid ocean a tiny ship amidst a huge ocean, its unerring ability to cross the sea questioned, and in the end, you are left with the sea.

Immunity from prosecution


Subject: Immunity from prosecution 



I'v had to turn it off, I'v had to turn away from the news for fear of being drawn into the compounding issue of Brexit post Johnson's victory. From a distant room down a long corridor I hear snippets of banality, Johnson's triumphant cock calling, phrases like, the commons voted "out by the 31st" (without the epithet 'and to hell with the consequences'). My mind jostles with the memory of those experts brought to the Commons Committees who explained the tremendous difficulties of extracting ourselves from a 40 year enmeshment in the European Union in which the fine balances in trade and finance are thrown out for we know not what. The phrase of "oven ready" some how seemed banal compared to the articulation prompted by the people who had made it their life's work to know about these things. And now the glee as the "oven ready" brigade parade their strength in the first of many votes which will pass into law so many unpalatable things which will effect all our lives. 
Perhaps the only way is to close the door and sit in a darkened room since in essence it can't effect me much in my final years. Why must I worry for the grey haired woman in Warrington or the year weary faced chap in the high street, they were convinced by the words on the side of the bus, they were hoodwinked and mesmerised by the hooded cobra that is Boris Johnson as he sways ungainly in his contempt for the common people who were so easily won over. His view of the upland path as it nears the cliff edge is different to mine, he has a parachute to glide back down to earth as we the lemmings plunge to their death, he can always accept the offer from Donald of immunity from prosecution. 




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Are norms the same as ethics


Subject: Are norms the same as ethics.

Morality and ethics loosely distinguish between good and bad, right and wrong, people think of morality as personal  or normative, and ethics the standard of good and bad distinguished by a certain community.
What is normal. Is our normality the same for all cultures or are there different norms for the Indian Hindu or the Pakistani Muslim do the stories coming out of China or Russia reveal a different norm to the one we supposedly hold precious here in this country. Do the people who decry what others do in the form of tradition or in the form of some sort or religious ritual have some sort of God given right to proclaim their abhorrence of other people's norms.
Normality when it comes to human actions or interaction, are they a fundamental, like the laws of mechanics or does it rely on the ethical process, a process of logic to finding a route through this short life without hurting others. 
The Greeks were famous for their ethical and moral debates but they borrowed much from earlier civilisation which had evolved in the Valley of the Euphrates and the early founding of the Indian seat of learning in the Indus Valley, and of course the Chinese who in their hidden kingdom were developing the philosophical and creative skills which only emerged in Europe 2000 years later. We the pronouncers of all which is right and proper today we're running around as primitives whilst these great culture flourished. Areas such as Egypt and Syria in fact the whole of the Middle East which today we decry for their apparent lack of humanity towards each other were the garden in which ethics and moral judgement were born and later debated by the Greeks to be passed on through the Romans to the western extremities including ourself. 
Christian teaching of the Commandments which came from the older Jewish religion holds a different connotation when practiced by a Jewish orthodox believer who seem content to go along with the Israeli concepts of peace and good will whilst the Christian from Minnesota is happy to pronounce for Donald.
'The lay of the land' seems to be the prevailing view which has as much pragmatism as ethical judgment and at our peril we pronounce against others.   
Comedy from the 1960s and 70s has these days to have a warning attached so as not to hurt the sensibilities of a more modern audience and yet the swearing which the modern comic uses to embellish his or her act are embarrassing to a 60s 70s audience.
The times are a changing and with it we perforce must change. If I lived in India I would have to accept the Caste system, if I lived in China I would have to get used to the authoritarian edict, and if living in South Africa during the days of Apartheid the laws had to be obeyed, even though your interpersonal relationships could soften the excesses. The undeniable fact is we sublimate our reasoning on the alter of our survival. It's a numbers game, we lose sight of those other norms which we held in the comfort of an overseas pampered environment and start to see the evil spirit under the bed (the tokoloshe) which given the chance will bite us all.
Given my submission that there is no such thing as an ethical or moral norm and that these pinch points in philosophical progress are always in flux as humankind adjusts to its new surroundings, then the so called philosophical,  ethical and moral norm which appears to flow naturally usually pampering  the the majority, is often seen differently to that which is taken up by the minority as it struggles to make its case. 
In the name of democracy, the people have spoken, overwhelmingly for another 5 years of Tory rule, which if history is anything to go by, the self same people have chosen willingly to bang their heads against a wall. But then the norm, in all its phases is nothing much more than what others tell us is normal, and the telling comes in many shapes and sizes, creeds and ideology's.
If it's a woman stoned to death for committing blasphemy or a man tied down onto the electric chair or incarcerated in Guantanamo Bay, these barbarous acts are seen to be outside the normal but seen from the ideology of patriarchal Sharia law or a modern Nations concept of self preservation, other people's norms can be argued away.
He who throws the first stone, beware of the consequences.

There's a food bank near you


Subject: A food bank near you.


The knifes are out and the analysis of what went wrong is flooding the airwaves with questions about Corbyn's leadership, Corbyn's link to causes he felt some sympathy with years ago, Corbyn's lack of decisiveness when faced with the problem of who to support in the Brexit debate when the bulk of his party in the labour heartland of the northern urban sprawl had voted to leave the European Union and yet he knew that the economic argument for staying in was overpoweringly true.
Listening to voters on the street the morning after and interviewed about their reaction to what had happened to make a fifty in some cases a one hundred year old Labour seat turn blue and swing their support around Boris Johnson the lack of any sort of deeper political analysis was so so evident. The arguments of whether socialism tops conservatism as to catering to the needs of the poor, whether their personal needs are better suited by a 'trickle down' hope that having won all the cards in the pack the other side, those who live another life in a different tree lined part of the town, 'maybe' just 'maybe' something will get done on a whole host of urgent needs in that other part of the urban sprawl. These working class men and women who repeatedly claimed that "nothing has been done for us in years" and were angry about it didn't seem to think that the government, 'the decision maker' regarding the allocation of funds was the party they had just voted for. Because labour had held the constituency they felt that the Labour Party was to blame and that by voting labour out, things would change and get better.
In a similar vein they believed getting out of Europe would now improve their lot,  that the stories they read in the newspapers demonising the EU was the cause of their way of life becoming harder.  There had been no alternative voice, no explanation that the EU had for years funded the projects in their town on the basis that the EU funds the poorest parts of Europe as a collective responsibility.  It could be asked why a beauocracy based in Brussels was more in tune with the needs of the people in Hartlepool than the national government in London but we will soon find since, having cut that funding stream and now solely reliant on Boris's gang, whether the projects continue or die as the myopic gaze of Westminster Governance takes hold and the public schoolboys turn to their real interests, the City and the rich pickings from a timely Short. 
Ones immediate reaction is to join the ranks of 'the don't care' about others outside my immediate circle. If they behave like headless chickens let them get eaten by the system. Why bother if, having voted Tory, in their simplicity, they await the riches the established Tory party members have, seemingly for having been a Tory. If the rich pickings which have come over the last decade to a tiny section of the society are now accelerated by the decisions of a wealthy cabal who sit almost unopposed on the government benches, if these pickings now don't take off into the financial stratosphere and the Etonian grip on our country is strengthened to literally choke the life out of the rest of us.  Don't be surprised if your towns and the services, including the NHS don't wither over the next decade into some sort of dystopian landscape in which the food-bank will be as common place as the Tesco corner store.

The morning after the night before


Subject: The morning after the night before.



Well that's me out. The Tories are set to smash Labour by a bigger margin than in the 1980s. It's a disaster for the country but given the stupidity of the average voter they deserve to see the NHS privatised, the BBC privatised, any sense of care in the community privatised, the bankers and their ilk set to stratosphise the gap between them and us. 
We will join the United States as a client state fitting in with their idea of the social aspects of how to treat its citizens.
Ideals out of the window as the lier extraordinaire takes his seat knowing that the public are so gullible he can tell them anything and they will lap it up.
It's a sad sad day for the country
When I talk to the ordinary man in the street and see his newspaper consumption of the tirade against Corbyn ever since he came into power the reality of a shrinking social state, the school sizes, the austerity and the withdrawal of central government  funds to the municipalities and town councils which saw an erosion in wages and services, when the people of Warrington and Halifax, Bishop Auckland and Trafford wake up from their slumber and the true face of rightwing conservatism shows it's true unadulterated face, then the bruised relationship they have experienced for the last 10 years will be as if they had been caressed, not kicked in the head. 
The man and woman in the street have not seen anything yet but they deserve every ill and every exploitative action soon to come their way. Boris will waste no time in pulling us out on WTO rules but perhaps he hasn't noticed his pal Donald has just castrated the WTO by withdrawing two of the judicial representatives, in effect closing WTO down. Just another small detail hidden from us as the confidence tricksters imposed this idea of a backstop if we walked away from Europe. It's becoming a jungle out there and in any jungle the weak and vulnerable will get eaten first. Just the guys and dolls who were magnetised by the hype of Boris and so ably abetted by the Express, the Mail, the Sun, and the Telegraph.
As a person of advancing years will I ever see a compassionate 'people' orientated party leading the country. Will I witness many of the things which in my lifetime have made me proud to be British. 
The people have voted.  My own opinion for what it's worth is that they didn't vote rationally but voted for a slogan, 'Brexit let's get it done' or that equally stupid slogan 'Brexit oven ready'. When people vote for slogans rather than looking under the cover of what those slogans mean then we have become a country of pigmies, hollowed out by an educational system fit more for the jungles of New Guinea than a 21st century modern society.
How will I survive watching 5 years of Boris Johnson waffle and pontificate at the dispatch box as he sells off the silver like some African despot. As the divide between the rich and the poor widen and the food banks swell to compete with Tesco, as the down and out are swept off the streets using a version of the water cannon he bought for London in an effort to cleanse our streets, as the school class sizes in the newly won conservative seats of Warrington and Halifax swell to 40 maybe 50 per class and the teacher becomes a conciliator not a teacher, as pricing and charging begin to creep in to the NHS to cover the increase in cost of drugs and services as the American pharmaceuticals make inroads into our unique free at the point of need service.
I wonder if the poorly shod, poorly housed, poorly fed unemployed man and woman who, across a swathe of the country put on the blue rosette for a bit of a laugh because they couldn't vote for a socialist could they.
Of course it could be considered sour grapes on my part but if it's only the grapes which sour then I apologise for my rant. But if the Etonians clap and cheer relived that they hold on to their charitable status and that their man is now firmly at the helm, that the top 1% are released of not being asked to be relieved of more of their boodle in the form of higher taxes, the privatised train operators can continue fleecing the pockets of the commuter now the threat of nationalisation has been removed. The very people who are the antithesis of Warrington man, (the men and women who focused on 'Brexit, oven ready' rather than their own perilous economic state), will be chuckling behind their Financial Times this morning as they plan the next 5 year bonanza.


Sent from my iPa

Election Day


Subject: Election Day


So the day has arrived a day when our airwaves and our newspapers will, by force of law be silent on the matter of politics. 'No attempt shall be made to persuade the citizens as to the way they will vote'. Its as if we are in the eye of a hurricane, a stillness has descended after weeks of storms, of lightening and thunder, of rain and wind everything has gone quiet as we turn out in our millions to put a cross against the party candidate we wish to enter parliament and represent us. The business of parliament reaches into all our lives, no one is immune from the laws which are passed or the investment of your tax money on projects supposedly to enhance your living standards. 
Election night is the night when the media stutters into action with the election night programs which swing into life once the elections booths are closed and the counting of votes is started. 
The pundits are rounded up, the usual media personalities appear to debate the possible outcome based on information, not gained inside the polling station but from outside the station where what are called 'exit polls' are undertaken to try to flush out the voting trends. Statistics and statisticians. become the grist to the mill as the information filters in from across the country and slowly begins to define which seats will fall to which Party and from these projections, who will be the overall winner. The counting continues throughout the night and as we move from the small hours through to daybreak increasingly tired observers lay aside their pencils and abacus and the politicians line up in the municipal halls up and down the country to acknowledge the winner in their specific patch..  We at home, if we have bothered, stay up and watch the trends, the graphs and swing indicators which flash onto our tv screens indicating which party will lead the country for the next five years. The losing politicians appear in front of the cameras each trying to hold their dignity, the winners, over the moon.  The teams of canvassers and backroom staff who for weeks and months, if not years have focussed on this one event, this one night of winners and losers sit huddled in their gloom or euphoria.. The leader of the party makes a jubilant or crestfallen speech depending on the result, if the Prime Minister has won he gets to sleep in the same bed, if he has lost he parades his family outside No 10 having gone to see the Queen to submit his resignation and then tiptoes offstage left as the winner, the new PM joyfully thanks all and sundry before entering through the door of No 10 to start work, no doubt almost immediately dismantling  much of what had been promised and scoring out much of what had led the millions to vote for him or her in the first place.
It's a sham of course, promises broken, scattered like confetti in the wind, no one to hold him or her to account for the truth or the lie, only the same old same old obfuscation and downright deceit. 
The manifestos held aloft to attract the votes now discarded for another five years. Words written without any intent, which if we were in a court of law and the meaning was deemed contractual then heads would roll but in this phantom political universe different rules apply in fact I must amend that, 'no rules' apply and in this virtual reality world of subterfuge, we allow the mendacity to run on and on as if we, the headless chickens want nothing more than to continue running blind.


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Monday 9 December 2019

Cheap but expensive


Subject: Cheap but expensive.






The fire which broke out in a factory in Delhi, causing the death of over 40 people who it appears were mostly sleeping inside the factory is part of the jigsaw which makes up the global economy. It's that part we don't see but which is essential to the slave economy  and the price we so ignorantly accept in our shops in the high street. We never question the price of a garment, there are the expensive labels and there are the myriad cheaper brands manufactured in just such a place which burnt down. It's all part part and parcel of the bonanza inherent in globalisation, the ability to exploit workforces and working conditions across the globe. It's a two edged sword, with the advent of 24/7 advertising which exploits the people living in the more affluent parts of the world stimulating them to buy things they don't need but are excited by slick presentation and the low price, a price dependent on people living and working on the other side of the world, living in abject poverty, working 15 hours a day for a penance, sleeping on the factory floor when not actually working. 
Can you imagine the discussions around the boardroom tables of investment banks discussing the financial opportunity given by exploitative manufacturing, exploiting men and women because they can. No minimum standards, no health and safety features, no limit to the hours demanded, all part of the delicious laissez a faire, market driven, smorgasbord of human manipulation practiced well away, out of sight but which similar industries, within our shoreline used to try to compete with.
The new economic order brought about in part by the use of the internet and immediate interactive communication. The factory in Delhi or Bangladesh an adjunct of Matalan  but seen only in terms of orders and delivery, a simple entry in a ledger with no sense of what happens in the factory. The rapacious public little concerned about a price which allows the purchaser to cast the dress away after a couple of nights, distressed only at the thought of being seen wearing something too often yet not distressed at the way it is landed in the shops at a price impossible to be made locally. 
We are all complicit in this exploitation of human misery. We all know but never the less  traipse off in search of the cheapest bargain but is it a bargain for everyone concerned, who cares. 
The argument that without these sweatshops the poor doomed employee wouldn't have a job is compelling in a society where inequality is engrained in the spectre of caste  an abomination of religious principles if ever there was one but to be so complicit, to not ensure that there has to be some sort of quid pro quo and that our 'Order'  is accompanied by some sort of audit as to the wages and conditions. Surely we should all be concerned to ensue this is the case. 

A perspective on ourselves is sorely needed.


Subject: A perspective on ourselves is sorely needed

What is it we see in our walks, is it the decay or the rebirth, is it the changes or the sameness of it all. As we walk along the river bank or beside the road do we see ourselves in the action of walking or do we etch out our own presence as if we didn't exist. The wooden coppice by the river bank or the ploughed field, the quaint cottage with roses around the gate or the busy road, alive with traffic going somewhere but as we stand and stare do we ever include ourselves in the landscape.
Our lives are encompassed by the seasons, in winter, as now, the surroundings pared back, its as if nature, cut to the bone is patiently waiting the first warmth of spring. The animals in the hedgerows are sleeping, conserving their energy to survive the cold yet In a few months those same animals will be scampering around in a flurry of activity rebuilding their nests, replenishing a larder for when the cold comes again. 
Only we have devised ways of ignoring the seasons with our warm strong houses and the invention of the shop to keep us supplied all year round. Only we push back against the seasons, ignoring the cold in our warm fleeces, or the wet in our waterproofs. Only we create an environment fit for all seasons impervious to Mother Nature or things that are not part of our human design. Only we would think of putting back the clocks to suite our purpose to modify and sometimes crush the delicate balance which is naturally all around. 
In our blindness we see only what we want to see and ignore the rest, when powerful people feel threatened, as in the case of Galileo who found when he revealed  the sun didn't revolve around our planet and by extension, us, the power that rested in the church was so astounded to have it pointed out that it's divine teaching was discordant with fact. It almost cost him his life, the diktat of papal authority which saw itself central and in direct communication with the creator, couldn't stand the thought that the universe wasn't  some sort of cosy 'folk belief',  placing us at the centre of everything.
And so it is today with global warming.  The power is not the Pope but that vested in business and finance and almost collectively they have denied the scientific facts and the imminent disaster awaiting the planet. 
Mankind rarely learns. It keeps burning it's fingers insisting on the same old cliched methods of what it sees as it's survival.  Power in the wrong hands, yes but given that we are all so similar, who's hands should be given the job of guiding us through the next hundred years.

Information overload and a poverty of imagination


Subject: Information overload and a poverty of imagination 

One of the problems with information overload is that you reach a state of disequilibrium where the information streaming in only seems to display disunity. 
The world in which you actually live when you visit to the shop or a walk down the high street reveals the exact opposite. People in my immediate world are on the whole singing from the same hymn sheet, there are differences, political differences, earnings related differences, hobby differences, music related and so on but in a benign, relatively secure society we all get along giving each other's preferences the green light even though we might not always see eye to eye. 
The ambience of a place, and I'm sure this is true in most parts of the world which are not engaged in war, is the product of live and let live, where people recognise each other by their instinctive humanity towards each other and the equally instinctive need to get along, as much for our own piece of mind, as anything else. 
Of course the television tells us something different, the screens are full of killing, Iraq, India, the USA, or emotional stories of children co-opted into domestic slavery, or worse, out of control bush fires caused it is suggested by climate change, epidemics which kill in the thousands, drug related gun fights in Mexico, the list is endless. But in all these crisis points, as the camera seeks out the worst, just to one side, perhaps in another street life is unaffected and people do what they do best, get on with one another. 


I was watching an interesting program on Al Jazeera where in front of an audience Ken Loach the British film maker and Edouard Louis the young French writer who had undergone a violent childhood and then in 2012 as an 18 year old was raped and almost killed in his flat. For both men the story of violence has been a passion, Loach through his grainy films depicting the violence of the political system and its effects on the poor and Louis in his upbringing as a Gay man fighting against homophobic prejudice.
For both men the world is not a world of live and let live, of assimilation but a crusade to change opinion and political awareness. 
It's tremendously instructive to be allowed an insight into that dark world, to be instructed on how it is to be disconnected from those very things which make us not only citizens but assume the integrity we assume is all around.
Of course poverty these days is a different concept to when I was growing up. The people who made up the society I knew were not unhappy with their lot, with no Twitter feed or smartphone it was the only world they knew. They were happy in the simple conformity around them, as children, the fields to roam in and as adults the simplicity of their lives, was a strength not a weakness. Credit cards had not been invented to encourage you to spend what you hadn't earned. Television was in its infancy with no adverts to create the allusions which have swollen into today's consumerist society.  
This is not to make light of the real poverty in such places as Glasgow or the East End of London but the poverty of 'not having things' never occurred to us so long as there was sufficient food on the table, the rest was a shared experience.
Today we have a poverty of imagination, the inability to make out what is good and what is worthless. We can't see the wood for the trees as the saying goes and until we do we will continue to be poor, irrespective of how much we earn.

The Trump Impeachment Trial


Subject: The Trump Impeachment Trial 


The Trump Impeachment Trial rolls on. This week it's been the eminent constitutional experts, professors academics seeped in the minuter of American constitutional law dating back to the founding fathers who's carefully created constitutional document become the bible for American policy making. 
The rules of Impeachment are tied back to the countervailing weight of what constitutes an 'Impeachment' offence and the current attempt to Impeach Donald Trump seems to be based on evidence which falls short of an actual crime. There has to be a crime committed not a potential for crime but an actual crime where the money is seen to be handed over on completion of a quid pro quo, "I will release the money for arms purchase's if you give me information on my presidential opponent Joe Biden and his son Hunter" was the incitement but since the arms money although delayed eventually was paid over and the information on Joe Biden and son was never revealed.
It's not enough to create the vehicle for this information to flow, the information has to actually flow and equally important withholding funds, has to remain in place for the claim of extortion to be valid. There's no doubt about intent,Trump is guilty but you can't impeach a person on intent.
Only one of the four experts, Professor  Jonathan Turley took this view, the others thought that sufficient intention was a crime in itself.
I find the case as argued before the American nation fascinating, both in what it depicts of the characters taking part, who can forget the image of a nominee to become a High Court Judge, Brett Kavanaugh virtually breaking down in front of the Senate committee.
The Democrats searching for misdemeanour the Republicans forensic in their rebuttal.
For me it's worth many episodes of East Enders and a plethora of cooking programs but then I'm keen on language for its own sake which is probably why I enjoy blogging.

Hatred of Johnny Foreigner


Subject: Hatred of Johnny Foreigner  

The political mind set is a remarkable thing. The Tory's are still ahead to win a majority at the election on the 12th even though their leader has been shown to be a man without integrity, a lier, a narcissist, unable to grasp the finer points of his Parties manifesto, who won't go head to head with Andrew Neil on the BBC for danger of being made to look a fool. This is the man who so many voters seem willing to forget all that in the drip feed of right wing propaganda against Jeremy Corbyn which has flowed virtually daily from the front pages of the Mail, the Express, the Sun, the Times and the Telegraph. If ever there was an establishment hatchet job done on the leader of a political party then this has been it. Despite the austerity program designed by George Osborn to peel down the services most of us need, the police, the health service, and local government which means virtually everything else, the populous is ready to return the man who mendaciously tried to bypass parliament in his obsession to take us out of Europe, come what may irrespective of the terms and the misery it will cause for a large proportion of those who will vote for him. The image of turkeys voting for Christmas comes to mind, so deep is their mythological hatred of Corbyn, conjured up by what they have been told he stands for. Boris's brother, Jo Johnson, also a conservative MP was so unhappy with what he saw was the direction of travel of the newly elected PM (Boris) that he resigned his ministerial position and also his seat in the Conservative party. Boris's sister Rachel has also been very dismissive of her brother suggesting she will vote Liberal at the election.
When those closest to you feel so aggrieved there has to be something wrong and what is wrong is their brothers willingness to gamble his country for the short term gains of the biggest 'short' laid against a country since George Soros shorted the pound in the 1970s. 
When you are prepared to gamble your countries financial prosperity and the prosperity of the bulk of its citizens then you know the ethical depths some people in the Tory Party are prepared to sink. From that weird specimen Rees-Mogg to Steve Baker, Dominic Raab, David Davis, Andrew Bridgen, Ian Duncan Smith, all desperate Brexiteers, to the 'dark money'  in the city who thrive of financial instability.
Would it be fair to accuse those Torys of having 'skin in the game', or is it purely an ideological hatred of Johnny Foreigner. 
The sums just don't add up for it being only ideological, coming out of our largest market and tying so much of our future financial prosperity on a trade deal with Donald Trumps America. There has to be either an inbred schism lying at the heart of their thinking, an island mentality where history has bred a distrust of continental Europe.
The people who voted to leave Europe did so after having had years of anti European propaganda from our own press, thrown at them day in and day out. Having stood years of Tory cut backs, the dire vision of future prosperity has developed in the poor outside the South  a "it couldn't be worse" mentality and the referendum gave them a chance to kick the established political opinion. Sadly the same source of political ideology, the Conservative Party reinvented itself and did a 180 degree U turn in lending their support to Boris Johnson who was prepared to back any course of action if it gave him the opportunity to move into Number 10.