dolorosa_12: (noviana una)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
I am not generally someone who finds flashy public displays of individual charity (or charity by a business) to be laudable — my opinion is that if charity is necessary, it's a sign that a government has failed in its responsibility. Failing to prevent children from going hungry to me demonstrates that a government in a comparably wealthy country has utterly failed in its most basic responsibilities.

It is not the job of a young footballer to essentially shame businesses and local councils into stepping in and providing the free meals for children that this shameless government refuses to provide — I find Marcus Rashford's campaign extremely admirable, but the fact that he needs to do such a thing is a sign of the government's moral failure, rather than being uplifting or inspiring.

That being said, Rashford's Twitter feed ([twitter.com profile] MarcusRashford) is making my heart overflow with emotion today.

(Title quote comes from a moment which is probably in my top ten favourite fictional scenes ever, in Philip Pullman's The Tiger in the Well, when my favourite fictional socialist revolutionary Dan Goldberg manages to talk down a violent mob by appealling to their sense of logic and justice. Leaving aside whether such acts of persuasion are anything other than wishful thinking, I most certainly agree with the sentiment that children should never be acceptable collateral damage of decisions made by the privileged and powerful.)

Date: 2020-10-23 04:24 pm (UTC)
wheatear: (Default)
From: [personal profile] wheatear
I grew up during the Blair years and looking back I don't think I realized how good we had it, at least compared to now. I benefited from financial support through sixth form and university (mind you, I was also among the first to pay tuition fees) and I know there were other initiatives like Sure Start that made a difference to early childhood years.

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dolorosa_12: (Default)
a million times a trillion more

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