I don't officially use this blog anymore, preferring to blog about music on
Lower End Spasm as ever, and various other bits and bobs on The Guardian's
Comment is Free blog (
In Defence of Hipsters and
In Defence of Musical (ahem) Miscegenation).
But I just wanted to express my consternation that so few people are connecting the whole financial apocalypse/end of the world as we know it to some of its historical forebears:

In particular, that so few commentators saw fit to connect
Gordon Brown's fantastic Labour Party conference speech calling for a "new settlement" to
FDR's 1933 speech calling for a (
the) New Deal. The latter called for cross-party unity and grand public works projects to raise up a poverty-stricken nation. "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself" he said; a message the spiralling markets could do with heeding today. In April 2007 The Guardian published a series of
Great Speeches in pamphlet form, and one of them was FDR's 1933 new Deal speech. Here are some timely words from the introduction to that pamphlet:
"The old order had collapsed; the old certitudes were as bankrupt as the countless companies that had gone under. Roosevelt... would discard one of the clearest pledges of this inaugural speech - that the cost of government would be "drastically reduced" - when he saw that the only way forward was for government to stimulate the economy, invest in great public works, feed the hungry and for a time employ millions who had nowhere else to turn."
And who wrote this elegy to FDR back in April 2007, just before things began to go belly-up? A man you may know called
Gordon Brown.
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