- Wed Dec 08, 2021 3:47 pm
#15435
I tend to see it as an admission that something is really cutting through and they're bang to rights. It really doesn't amount to anything more than "please stop saying nasty things".
I get that the intended use of the phrase is to suggest the questioner is trying to make political advantage out of something so serious that it should unite all right-thinking people in finding a solution together, and sometimes that is true. When two sides are debating a tragic issue with repeated accusations of what the other side did or didn't do when they had the chance, it is a little tiresome.
But throughout this pandemic, like Brexit and so many other matters, this government has not adopted a collegiate, all the talents, national unity approach. They have single-handedly taken control of massive issues of national and international importance and blocked out not just anyone from any other party (save the DUP), but anyone within their own ranks who offered an unorthodox opinion.
As I said in another place about Brexit, the ramifications of leaving the EU were so huge that they couldn't really be entrusted to people working for short term domestic political advantage, especially when personal, constituency, party, legal and national obligations and ambitions were obviously going to collide. In retrospect, a body formed from a cross-section of politics, business, cultural organisations etc, and headed/fronted by someone with both gravitas and an image of being above short term politics - in other words, someone seen to be acting in the national interest - would have been better than what we got. Hell, we managed it for the Olympics.
At no point in the pandemic has the government attempted to engage with anyone outside its selected band of medical/scientific authorities*, and its chosen business partners. Remember the companies that could actually mass produce PPE shoved aside in favour of paper companies belonging to mates? Nadine Dorries shooting down offers of cross-party cooperation, saying that Labour lost the election so should shut up? The constant "watch your tone" messages to any (largely female) MP who dared criticise, however constructively, the government's approach? From the start, the message was "We know best, the rest of you do as we tell you or fuck off".
They're convinced that they have a right to rule. Sure, they have an electoral mandate, but they have long since stopped even pretending that they do anything in the national interest, as in for everyone and not just for those they like.
They're the ones playing politics, and they cannot possibly go quickly enough.
*"I know the President's chief scientific adviser; we were at MIT together. And trust me, in this situation you really don't want to be taking the advice of someone who got a C- in astrophysics." - Ronald Quincy (Jason Isaacs), Armageddon.
As the actress said to the bishop, rabbi, imam and priest
"My eyes have seen the glory, I'm a born again Atheist!"