On the Death of a Politician
Here richly, with ridiculous display,
The Politician’s corpse was laid away.
While all of his acquaintance sneered and slanged
I wept : for I had longed to see him hanged.
~ Hilaire Belloc
Fighting for peace is like screwing for virginity.
This is amazing! And unlisted, too, so not widespread! I wish I had seen it when AV was (briefly) the big issue in our politics!
And if you read here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-12571666 you’ll see that the musical is actually real, and will be staged in Suffolk ‘this spring’!
Do socialists have brains?
The study; According to a news article, hot off the press in this month’s Psychologist, Colin Firth has co-authored a neuroimaging study and resulting paper investigating difference in brain structure according to political inclination. Rees from UCL’s Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience took brain-scans of a Tory and Labour politician. The study was then extended to comparing the brain-scans of first 90 participants, and then 20 further.
The results; Well, the trends that were spotted were those with more Liberal leanings had thicker tissue in the ‘anterior cingulate’ and those with Tory tendencies had a bigger ‘right amygdala’. Interestingly, on the last 20 tested, the investigators could predict the political directions of the participants by looking at the scan with 72% accuracy.
The analysis; does the size and shape of different areas of the brain dictate our political opinions? If so this could have potentially huge implications - could politicians be in fact powerless over the views of the electorate? Would the traditional right vs left nature of politics be dropped in favour of responding more directly to shifting desires, markets and needs? In fact, could this explain why a coalition appears to please no-one?
The other alternative; do our political leanings actually alter the size and shape of the brain? This powerful overlap between our personality, identity and idea of ‘self’ and our physical existence and anatomy rings clear if this is the case.
The conclusion; what this study actually means, if anything, is yet to be seen and of course whether it will actually have any difference on our political systems and the crowd psychology that becomes obvious upon election time is debatable. While I will certainly keep an eye on further research in this area, do let me know if anyone has anything to add.
The blogability: This study could not show more perfectly the overlap between psychology on a personal level, sociology as we interact as a country, and politics as the country is led in one direction over another.
This is very interesting research. I’m not sure that the study is large enough to assure us that either of the possibilities proposed are true, but the implications are certainly massive! I do think, however, that a weakness of this kind of research is that it’s very difficult to pigeonhole people into ‘Liberal’ or ‘Conservative’ these days. I myself am financially Conservative, but I can see the merits of a number of Liberal social policies. Still, good stuff!
Who reads the papers? - Yes, Prime Minister
An absolutely hilarious sketch from Yes, Prime Minister, with a surprisingly apt set of observations on the media! My favourite quote:
‘The Guardian is read by people who think they ought to run the country.’
Nicht durch Reden und Majoritätsbeschlüsse werden die großen Fragen der Zeit entschieden […] sondern durch Eisen und Blut.
Otto von Bismarck - Translation: Not by speeches and votes of the majority, are the great questions of the time decided […] but by iron and blood.
I post this because I saw a production of Andrew Lloyd-Webber’s Evita last night, and one of the most chilling scenes is a song called ‘The Art of the Possible’, which was Bismarck’s description of politics. The scene illustrates, in a way so simple as to be severely chilling, the political maneuvering and removal of opponents that was commonplace in Argentinean politics at the time.
For the song, either click http://open.spotify.com/track/52AFTnCzp1jUUOMNAdpbeT or (though lower quality) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kinFwq9FSrQ
#073. Economics and Politics Club. “Euro Sterling”.
All the best clubs at my school! With the best posters too ;-)
Indeed it will.
How times change. This 1970s US advert shows support for Iran’s nuclear programme, and, indeed, the Shah had previously agreed to build 23 nuclear reactors by 2000, with America’s help. A long way from today’s policies!
The trouble with Socialism is that it takes up too many evenings.
The study; According to a news article, hot off the press in this month’s Psychologist, Colin Firth has co-authored a neuroimaging study and resulting paper investigating difference in brain structure according to political inclination. Rees from UCL’s Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience took brain-scans of a Tory and Labour politician. The study was then extended to comparing the brain-scans of first 90 participants, and then 20 further.