|
The Spectator
in the Breast of Man:
Self-regulation and the Decline of Civility
Peter Saunders talks to Theodore
Dalrymple
Click
here for PDF version
Theodore
Dalrymple is probably best known for his weekly columns in
The Spectator
and his essays in the American quarterly City Journal.
He is a psychiatric doctor working in an inner city area in
Britain where he is attached to a large hospital and a prison.
His columns report on the lifestyles and ways of thinking
of BritainÕs growing underclass, and in his latest book, Life
at the Bottom, he warns that this underclass culture is
spreading through the whole society. Peter Saunders interviewed
him for Policy.
Peter
Saunders: YouÕve been writing this column in The Spectator
for 12 years, and now the book has come out. Your essays are
very rich descriptively, but what is the basic message that
we should take away from reading them?
Theodore
Dalrymple: I think itÕs the idea that people are not billiard
balls. TheyÕre not impacted on by forces like cold fronts
in the weather and react accordingly. They actually think
about what theyÕre doing. For example, criminals are conscious
of what theyÕre doing and they respond to incentives. And
they have a cultureÑthey have beliefs about what theyÕre doing.
PS:
But what comes through in your essays is that they themselves
talk as though they are billiard balls.
TD:
Well, I think theyÕve been taught to speak like that. And
you can actually break it down by saying to them, ÔNow come
on! You didnÕt burgle that house because of your bad childhood,
you burgled that house because you wanted to take something
in it and you didnÕt know how else to go about getting it
because youÕre unskilled, you have no intention of getting
any skillsÕÑand they start laughing! And oddly enough, when
I speak with them quite plainly, my relations with them improve.
PS:
Has anybody ever hit you!?
TD:
No, never! I mean there are the true psychopaths who make
oneÕs blood run cold because they are untouchable by normal
human relationships. But they are relatively few. So my relations
with the prisoners are extremely good. To give you another
example, drug addicts come in and they spin me a line, and
I just wonÕt have it. ThereÕs initially friction because I
refuse to prescribe for them and one of the things thatÕs
very difficult to get across is that withdrawal effects from
heroin, for example, are very minor. TheyÕre trivial.
PS:
Really? ThatÕs not the way itÕs portrayed, is it?
TD:
ItÕs not the way itÕs portrayed but it is actually the truth.
I canÕt tell you how many people IÕve withdrawn from heroin.
You never get any problems with it. ItÕs not like withdrawal
from serious drinking which can be, and often is, a medical
emergency. From a medical point of view, IÕm much more worried
in the prison when someone tells me heÕs an alcoholic. IÕm
much more worried about the physical consequences of his withdrawal
because they are really serious, and he can die from them.
But nobody ever dies from heroin withdrawal. With the vast
majority of them, you just take them aside and say: ÔIÕm not
prescribing anything for you, I will prescribe symptomatic
relief if I see you have symptoms, but what you tell me has
nothing to do with it, IÕm not going to be moved by any of
your screaming.Õ One chap came in and said ÔWhat are you prescribing
me?Õ and I said ÔNothingÕ, and he screamed at me, ÔYouÕre
a butcher! YouÕre a f***ing butcherÕ, and he screamed and
shouted and eventually I said ÔTake him awayÕ. Everyone outside
heard this, and they were like lambs!
PS:
Are you getting respect from these guys because youÕre being
tough? So youÕre appealing to that macho, tough-guy culture?
TD:
I think itÕs because what IÕm saying is true. And because
I am prepared to put myself out for them. For example, if
they have difficulty contacting their lawyer, which must be
very frightening for someone, I will do that kind of thing
for them. Plus of course I do my best for them medically.
I do what I think is right. And IÕm not going to be diverted
either by them or by the prison administration, which also
tries to get you to do things which are wrong. IÕve told the
officers, with these people you have to play it absolutely
straight. You need some kind of moral superiority over them.
PS:
And your thesis would be that this is what all institutions
ought to be doingÑthat hospitals, schools, prisons and so
on ought to be playing it straight?
TD:
Yes. And weÕve ceased to do this. One of the reasons is that
people are very sentimental. When it comes, for example, to
dealing with drug addicts, thereÕs no question in my mind
that the drug-treating establishment tries to ingratiate itself
with the drug takers by seeing everything from their point
of view. But I donÕt see it from their point of view. I see
what theyÕre doing as wrong. ItÕs wrong from every point of
view and itÕs wrong for them personally, and IÕm not going
to tell them anything else. I refuse to use their argot. I
call needles ÔneedlesÕ and syringes ÔsyringesÕ. I absolutely
refuse to pretend that I have anything to do with their (I
hate to use the word ÔcultureÕ) way of life.
The
drug-treating establishment tries to ingratiate itself with
the drug takers by seeing everything from their point of view
PS:
Your thesis is that this ÔcultureÕ (in an anthropological
sense) extends far beyond the people youÕre seeing in prison
and in hospital. There are chapters in your book where youÕre
venturing into the betting shops and the night clubs.
TD:
Yes, the worst of it is, you see, that the people in those
night clubs are not the underclass. ItÕs widespread. ItÕs
people in their 20s, their late 20s, and I donÕt know if theyÕre
ever going to grow out of it. I do meet intelligent people
and they come to me and they know that thereÕs something missing
in their lives, but they donÕt know what it is. I tell them
that whatÕs lacking is any kind of educational or cultural
interest, but they donÕt seem to be able to acquire one, even
though there are of course ways of doing so.
PS:
Is this just an exaggerated fashion, a fad that young people
go through?
TD:
Well, I suppose itÕs possible for someone at 28 to get educated,
but itÕs difficult. IÕve often wondered whether, just as if
a child doesnÕt acquire a language by shall we say the age
of six, so too if a child hasnÕt learned to concentrate by
the age of 12 or something, if they donÕt acquire the habit
of concentration, then I donÕt know that itÕs something they
ever learn.
PS:
ItÕs interesting that you raise intelligence, because Charles
Murray and Richard HerrnsteinÕs book about the underclass
in America links it very strongly to low intelligence. You
donÕt accept that?
TD:
I donÕt believe that. I dare say that there is a concentration
of less intelligent people in the underclass, but I donÕt
think the phenomenon that IÕve described can be explained
in biological terms. After all, the behaviour of the football
fans canÕt be explained like that. If it were true, why is
it not true in every country and every place?
PS:
Do you see this as peculiarly a British problem?
TD:
ItÕs worse in Britain, but itÕs not peculiar to it. I understand
itÕs getting worse in countries like France, for very similar
reasons. I go to France a fair amount, and one of the things
I notice is the increasing French anxiety about their level
of education. The same causes are producing the same results.
PS:
So itÕs obviously multi-causal, but youÕre locating one of
the causes of this problem in the education system?
TD:
Well, itÕs certainly not helping. I think schools could possibly
be one way out for poor people, to give the children an alternative
view of life. But thereÕs no attempt to do so. TheyÕre enclosed
in the world which they already bring to school. PS: So if
the schools are going wrong, then whatÕs the cause of that?
TD:
I believe youÕre a sociologist!? [laughs]. I think ideas eventually
have consequences. The peopleÑlike sociologistsÑwho have those
ideas are actually in positions of responsibility, power and
influence.
PS:
ThatÕs one of the ideas that comes through in the book very
stronglyÑthis idea of the treason of the intellectuals and
the trickle down of their ideas so that a generation on they
appear in the thinking of the lower classes.
TD:
Yes, and then the intellectuals refuse to see what theyÕve
done. I describe in the book how intellectuals simply refuse
to believe what IÕm telling them I see. My sample is a selective
one, itÕs true, but I donÕt think a sample of 50,000 people
can be called insignificant. I have no reason to think people
coming to my hospital are any different from those at at least
two other hospitals in the cityÑand thatÕs only the ones that
come to me. And I ask ordinary people, good solid working
class people, completely honest, ÔAm I exaggerating? Am I
hearing things?Õ, and they say no, absolutely no.
PS:
LetÕs try to pin down in a bit more detail what this culture
is and whatÕs bad about it. YouÕre saying that itÕs something
thatÕs developed since the 1960sÑitÕs come out of the intellectual
ferment of that decade, and itÕs trickled down, and now weÕre
living with the consequences of it. So what is this culture?
TD:
First of all I think itÕs a radical egotism. And self-importance.
What one wants oneself becomes all important. At the same
time as that egotism, you also have a conception of rights.
I suppose you can say itÕs the libertarian right admixed with
an element from the left of a rights-driven agenda.
PS:
A lot of people look back on the 1980sÑthe Thatcher decadeÑand
say that was what really made things a lot worse. The individualism,
the money orientationÑ
TD:
ÑI think thereÕs certainly an element of truth in that because
in some ways Mrs Thatcher was a mirror-image Marxist. Everything
that Marx abhorred she thought was good, and she thought (or
she appeared to thinkÑIÕm not sure she gave enough attention
to it) that if only we could get the economy right then everything
else would follow. But in fact the market can completely destroy
social relations if the market is completely uninformed by
any kind of vision. If the whole world is treated as a sweet
shop, and all youÕve got to do is choose, then I think thatÕs
very wrong. And I donÕt think Adam Smith would have approved.
I suspect that Mrs Thatcher understood thatÑbut I think that
when people are in power, they actually lose sight of what
is going on. And she also didnÕt do very much to alter the
welfare state.
PS:
IÕll come to the welfare state in a minute if I may. But while
weÕre on politicians, that famous phrase of BlairÕsÑÔtough
on crime, tough on the causes of crimeÕÑat the start of the
interview you said you get the respect of criminals by refusing
to accept their excuses, and being quite tough with them.
Well, thatÕs BlairÕs message too, isnÕt it?
In
some ways Mrs Thatcher was a mirror-image Marxist. Everything
that Marx abhorred she thought was good
TD:
Yes, but for purely electoral purposes. I donÕt think he is
tough. Because he wants to be liked by everyone, equally,
all the time, it means that heÕs a man who genuinely doesnÕt
seem able to be disliked. Now I donÕt mind if people read
me and dislike what I say because I believe what I say is
true. Obviously there are people who disagree with me about
the causes of what I see. But what does make me angry is when
people donÕt see what I see and claim that it doesnÕt exist,
and doesnÕt exist on a very large scale, when I believe that
my perception is accurate. I have enough confidence in myself
now to say that.
PS:
But most of us arenÕt living in an inner city and dealing
with heroin addicts.
TD:
You soon will be if we donÕt watch out! ItÕs coming to us.
I donÕt believe we can build a wall around ourselves. One
of the things thatÕs happened recently is that middle class
people are alarmed and shocked when they find themselves victims
of the kinds of crimes that IÕve been writing about. They
said I was exaggerating, and to be perfectly honest, I donÕt
think they cared. If they thought it was true, they just thought
they were animalsÑthey didnÕt think these people were people.
PS:
Some people argue that itÕs being drug-driven, donÕt they?Ñthat
the great crime wave has been driven by the need to get money
to feed the drug habit. And that of course is the argument
for decriminalising hard drugs.
TD:
Well that is the argument, but I suspect it is wrong. I think
the decision to take heroin in these deeply criminalised sub-cultures
is itself part of the criminal mentality. After all, now heroin
is so cheap that a person on the minimum wage can be a heroin
addict. So effectively youÕre saying that if you made it free,
these people wouldnÕt commit crime. I donÕt believe that.
PS:
And if we decriminalised it, then presumably this would just
be another area that weÕve given up on.
TD:
We just give upÑwe donÕt draw the line anywhere. And one has
to ask oneself, why do so many people take it? This again
is fairly recent. I mean, if somebody said to me, ÔHereÕs
some heroin, you can have it free for the next ten yearsÕ,
I wouldnÕt take it.
PS:
Is that something thatÕs trickled down from the intellectuals?
TD:
I think it might have in the sense that [they have taught
that] nothing is wrong, everything is just a matter of lifestyle,
thereÕs nothing to choose between going out to work and lying
around in your own vomit. However, I think there is another
point here that perhaps isnÕt caused by intellectuals. That
is that if you take the group of people who injectÑand after
all, it is a lower class thing to doÑit is difficult to see
for an uneducated and perhaps not very intelligent person
how that person can have any self-respect. HeÕs not a provider
for anybody. HeÕs never going to be a provider. If he has
children, he has almost certainly abandoned them. So itÕs
difficult to see what you can offer these people other than
this very miserable existence. In places like Zaire, where
IÕve worked, thereÕs a kind of self-respect even amongst the
very poor who, for example, although they live in mud and
all the rest of it, will turn themselves out on Sunday immaculately.
And you can still see that with West Indians in my area in
BritainÑthe older generation on Sunday, they are so beautifully
dressed, itÕs a delight to see.
In
places like Zaire, where IÕve worked, thereÕs a kind of self-respect
even amongst the very poor
PS:
On the question of race, thereÕs that image one has of the
older generation in the West Indian community in Britain trying
to maintain respect and standards and so on, but thereÕs also
an image of young male West Indians being in the vanguard
of a lot of the problems youÕre talking about. Is that false,
or is this a partly racialised problemÑin the way that the
American underclass clearly is?
TD:
I donÕt think itÕs racial. It clearly is very widespread
among Jamaican males, of that there can be no question whatever,
but it is certainly not just Jamaican males. This is something
that exists among the white working class males as well, and
increasingly among the Indians tooÑprincipally the Muslims,
but not the Sikhs. When I started in the prison there were
very few prisoners of Indian origin, and now they seem set
to overtake West Indians even, but itÕs only Muslims. There
are no Hindus in prison. The rate of imprisonment is six times
that of Sikhs which is twice that of Hindus, something like
that.
PS:
IÕd always thought the racial differencesÑthe fact that home
ownership rates, for example, are much higher in Britain among
Asians than among West Indians, or that educational performance
of Asian children now outperforms that of whites while West
Indians lag far behindÑIÕd always thought these differences
were due to family structure. Many West Indian families are
single parents, yet Asian family structures are very strong.
But you seem to be suggesting the differences are due to religious
morality?
TD:
Well, IÕm not quite sure. As far as I can tell, the Muslim
family structure is extremely oppressive, amongst the groups
I see at any rateÑgenuinely oppressive. So while IÕm all in
favour of intact families, I think there is some kind of happy
medium! You need to disaggregate racial groups. West Africans
in Britain, for example, are doing very well, but that never
gets published or publicised because of course it automatically
destroys the idea that racism is the problem. The whole apparatus
of anti-race-discrimination should be dismantled because itÕs
quite unnecessary. It makes things worse, it makes people
paranoid. I believe it to be deeply perniciousÑand I donÕt
even believe that prejudice is necessarily a harmful thing
for the person who suffers it (within reason), because it
can actually be a spur to achievementÑobviously within reason.
I donÕt think you can police private feelings. And thereÕs
a danger if you have a complete disjunction between public
policy and private feeling. I can conceive of a genuine fascist
backlash in Britain. When I see the football crowds, which
are overwhelmingly white, I think, my God, if somebody organised
these people, I wouldnÕt want to be around when it happened.
And theyÕre obviously deeply resentful about something. Now,
one of the things is that weÕve lost all sense of cultural
confidence. If you have cultural confidence, the sense that
you have something worthwhile, you can easily absorb these
people, but if you are constantly going on and saying how
terrible we are and how thereÕs nothing in our culture that
is worthwhile, then eventually it becomes true. I canÕt see
anything worthwhile in British culture nowÑthere isnÕt anything.
There are of course worthwhile people, but the overwhelming
majority of it is charmless, worthless.
The
whole apparatus of anti-race-discrimination should be dismantled
because it makes people paranoid.
PS:
Living as I do now in Australia, it strikes me that Australia
is much more nationalistic, in a positive way, than Britain
is. ThereÕs a pride in Australia. And it is of course a very
multi-ethnic, multicultural country, and is seemingly very
successful in getting different groups to live side by side
without knocking the stuffing out of each other.
TD:
But I think Australians could destroy it by over-emphasising
the harmfulness of their colonial past. What weÕre actually
seeing here is the culture, which I suppose is still fundamentally
British, the political culture, is actually an achievement
of world historical importance. It is one of the most attractive
cultures that man has producedÑthe Anglophone inheritance.
ThatÕs why immigrants come here, for GodÕs sake! Nobody wants
to emigrate to China. So thereÕs something good about it,
and what is good is of course the inheritanceÑthe democratic
structure, the open culture, the relatively open economy,
a relative lack of corruption, freedom of association, freedom
from fear of the knock on the door at midnightÑthese are all
tremendous achievements. The idea that thereÕs a political
opposition that doesnÕt get shot. And of course we have one
of the greatest literary cultures in manÕs history, in which
Australia can take part positively.
PS:
I came across research showing that the most individualistic
country in the world is the United States, second is Australia,
third Britain and fourth CanadaÑso youÕve got the Anglophone
countries as the most individualistic cultures. The list you
just rattled off, the positive virtues of that British inheritance,
these are all virtues associated with individualism. But perhaps
what youÕre mapping in your book is the reverse side of thatÑmaybe
the price we pay for a culture thatÕs dynamic and open and
that respects individual diversity is that weÕre loathe to
impose collective moral rules on peopleÑand that the result
is social fragmentation?
TD:
Well yes, if that freedom is taken to extremes, but there
was an inherited understanding that freedom is only of value
if people have some kind of virtue. Roger Kimball in one of
his books quotes a judge from the last century who said that
if people lose their sense of obedience to the unenforceable
rules, then civilisation itself is in danger. He said that
people should not think that because it is legally permissible
to do something that it is permissible in any other sense.
Obviously we do not want a law telling us to stand there and
not stand thereÑbut we have no internal sense that we donÕt
actually push in front of one another, or bash people aside,
and that our rights have to be tempered by respect for other
peopleÕs rightsÑthat is what seems to have changed. In Britain,
for example, I speak with people on housing estates and they
tell me that one of the worst things imaginable is having
a neighbour who insists on playing music at three in the morning
extremely loudly. It sounds like a trivial thing, but it isnÕt
trivial if it goes on night after night and if you know that
if you draw attention to it youÕre likely to be greeted with
an angrily-wielded baseball bat because that person whoÕs
wielding it thinks that youÕre infringing his liberties. I
think at one time everyone would have understood without it
having to be explained that your right to your privacy and
pleasures is tempered by my similar rights. But I think weÕve
lost that sense.
PS:
But whatÕs caused that? YouÕve mentioned the education system,
and the radical egoism of the 1960s, and weÕve talked about
the Thatcher inheritance too, and we said we would come back
to the welfare state. Is the welfare state culpable?
TD:
I think itÕs a necessary condition, but not a sufficient
oneÑor perhaps itÕs not even necessary. I donÕt think the
welfare state is solely responsible. It certainly makes some
things possibleÑfor example, it makes the breakdown of the
family possible; but I donÕt think it makes it inevitable.
The people who first experienced the welfare state did not
start to behave badly immediatelyÑÔOh, now weÕve got the welfare
state so we can have children out of wedlock, or we can divorce
one another, and we can be violent with impunity.Õ I believe,
for example, if you look at New Zealand, the welfare state
is older in New Zealand than in Britain, and the crime rate
started going up some time later than in Britain.
PS:
So if it wasnÕt the welfare state that caused it, what was
it?
TD:
I think itÕs modern culture. And modern ideas. The idea that
human relationships can be freed of all social obligation
and contractual obligation and that then the full, beautiful
human personality comes outÑwell, itÕs romantic drivel.
The
idea that human relationships can be freed of all social obligation
and contractual obligation is romantic drivel.
PS:
YouÕve identified a very worrying problem, and youÕve identified
the shift in the intellectual climate that lies behind it,
and the pernicious effect that has had as itÕs trickled down
the class system. So how do you start to reverse it? Is there
anything government can do?
TD:
I think there are things. You can restore the financial
fiscal benefits of marriageÑsay that there will be allowances
for certain people and not for other people. That the state
will support certain forms of human association and not others.
PS:
So government should start sending out some unambiguous
moral messages?
TD:
Signals. Yes. I donÕt think thatÕs oppressive because youÕre
not saying that if you want a child out of wedlock you canÕt
have one, youÕre going to be publicly stoned to death in the
town square or anything like thatÑitÕs just saying that we
are not going to pay for it and if you do it youÕve got to
do it on your own.
PS:
OK, thereÕs tax incentives in family policy. What else?
TD:
I certainly think that we need more repression. I mean
we need our police to be able to say, ÔYou will not be drunk
in the street, and if you are drunk in the street you will
be taken to court, and if youÕre taken to court you will be
punished, and the punishment will hurt, and if you do it again
the punishment will hurt even more.Õ
PS:
This is the Ôbroken windowsÕ theoryÑthat if you clamp down
on small incivilities, you will stop the bigger crimes too?
TD:
Yes. IÕll give you a small example. I live in a very nice
square of Victorian houses, and around the square is a grass
garden, and when I look out from my windows itÕs really very
beautiful. So if I see litter I go and collect it, because
I know that if I donÕt collect it, people will see it and
say, ÔNobody cares hereÕÑand if youÕve got a million pieces
of litter, dropping another piece of litter doesnÕt really
make any difference. So IÕm quite prepared to go out and clean
up litterÑI donÕt want to do it, of course, but IÕm prepared
to do it, and IÕve noticed other people do it as well.
PS:
IsnÕt this finger-in-the-dyke stuff? Your book says you have
prostitutes soliciting on the corner where you live, thereÕs
drug pushers over the way, and thereÕs you picking up litter.
ItÕs commendable, but thereÕs a great wave of crime out there.
TD:
Yes of course itÕs a very small thing. And IÕve no desire
to be a litter-picker! ItÕs not my ambition in life. But if
I donÕt do itÑif I took the view that I pay 1200 pounds local
taxes a year so IÕm bloody well not going to do it, then IÕd
be cutting off my nose to spite my face. ItÕs true, itÕs a
small thing, but the world is full of small things. Maybe
even the prostitutes will treat the place with slightly more
respect than they would if it was dirty. If you do disregard
signs of public disorder, then they will just multiply.
PS:
You used the word ÔrepressionÕ just now. I suppose you really
mean ÔauthorityÕ, based on the rule of law?
TD:
Well it is repression because if you remove the repression,
you get that kind of behaviour again. Now of course IÕd much
prefer it if people would internalise this, if they realised
that appearing in public with a bottle in your hand, absolutely
dead drunk, vomiting in the street, means that you have no
self-respectÑapart from being unpleasant. I would much prefer
that we had a well-ordered society rather than one, like Singapore,
where the moment you step out of line someone jumps on you.
The fact is that I could go and drink on the street like everybody
else but IÕm not going to do it, and thatÕs because I believe
it to be wrong to do so. But unfortunately I think weÕve reached
the stage where many people think that if itÕs not actually
forbidden, then itÕs alright to do it.
Many
people think that if itÕs not actually forbidden, then itÕs
alright to do it.
PS:
Let me be slightly mischievous. You talk in the book about
tattooing and body piercing and studs through the navel. When
I was 16 and came home with a pair of Cuban-heel boots my
father said ÔIÕm not having them in the house, theyÕre common!Õ
YouÕre now saying that navel-piercing is ÔcommonÕ. But I wonder
if some of what you are picking up on is harmless fads and
fashions? Maybe youÕre just being a bit crusty?
TD:
It would be harmless if people understood that it is just
fashion, and that it belongs in its place. But they understand
it as a right, so now, for example, in my hospital ward thereÕs
a male nurse, heÕs actually a nice chap. But he insists on
having his face full of ironmongery, he has 17 earrings in
his ear, and itÕs probably not very hygienic. Anyway, eventually
the hospital administration, which is far from repressive,
said ÔLook, you canÕt come to work like thatÕ, and his attitude
was, ÔIf IÕve got a right to do it, IÕve got a right to do
it anywhere.Õ So thereÕs no limitation. Neither is there any
acceptance that if youÕve got ÔF*** OffÕ tattooed on your
forehead, that means you canÕt really serve in a shop! They
say, ÔYou canÕt discriminate against me.Õ So nobodyÕs prepared
to accept the consequences of their eccentricities or of what
they do. If we lived in a culture where you accept that, if
you have a ring through your nose, you canÕt get a job in
a merchant bank, that would be fine. But the demand now is
that nobody should be allowed to draw any inferences from
anything.
PS:
The sort of concerns you are expressing are often popularly
associated with being Ôright-wingÕ, or even Ôextreme right-wingÕ.
Do you think of yourself as Ôa man of the rightÕ, and do you
think that the right has an exclusive claim over these kinds
of concerns?
TD:
I donÕt think of myself as ÔrightÕ, let alone Ôfar rightÕ.
IÕm culturally conservative in that I do feel cross about
people who constantly claim to discover wrong in the past
as if thereÕs nothing good about it. IÕm strongly aware of
the enormous effort it has taken for people to make the discoveries
that we now take for granted, so that is one of the lessons
that we should be teaching in history. So IÕm conservative
in that sense. I donÕt think itÕs particularly right-wing,
or even exclusively right wing, as I think itÕs perfectly
possible for people to be economically left-wing and culturally
conservative. Poor people need social rules much more than
rich people. Their life is much worse if they donÕt have those
rules. So what I object to is the cultural liberalÕs view
that they are being kind to the poor when actually they are
making their lives hell.
PS:
How long have you been working with people like the ones you
write about?
TD:
All my life. I have never worked in medicine anywhere in the
world with better-off people!
PS:
So are you some kind of masochist? How on Earth do you keep
going? It must be absolutely dispiriting being confronted
every day with evidence of the worst side of human nature.
TD:
I think if I didnÕt write about it I couldnÕt do it. IÕd explode
if I didnÕt communicate this. ItÕs very important that people
should know this is going on. It seems to me that they donÕt
know partly because they donÕt look, and they donÕt really
want to know. I want them to know whether they want to know
or not, because I think itÕs very important. But I donÕt think
I could do it for a day if I didnÕt think I could write about
it.
PS:
And you write about it in such a humorous way. Is the
humour a shieldÑif you donÕt laugh you cry?
TD:
But it is actually very funny! Many times, I mean I donÕt
laugh in front of the patient, but many times what they say
is very funny. But itÕs an uncomfortable kind of funniness
because itÕs also so terrible. As I said, I donÕt really know
whether to throw myself off the roof or to roll about with
laughter.
PS:
And humour is also one of the best political tools. ItÕs such
a sharp way of getting people on your side.
TD:
Yes, IÕm surprised I havenÕt really been attacked much more
than I have been.
PS:
Is that because youÕre tucked away in The Spectator
which only right-wing people read?
TD:
I suppose really I should be writing for The Guardian.
I think one of the reasons IÕm not attacked is because you
canÕt read what IÕm saying for very long without realising
that what IÕm saying is true. People might disagree with the
causes or solutions, but they canÕt just say ÔNo, heÕs lying,
heÕs making it up.Õ
PS:
In the book you end one of the chapters by saying, ÔThere
are more votes in vulgarity than in the denunciation of it.
Does that mean it is destined to be ever victorious?Õ So let
me ask you that: Do you end up profoundly pessimistic or is
there a note of optimism?
TD:
ThereÕs a chapter in the book about religion. I think thereÕs
a distinct possibility there. IÕm not religiousÑI used to
be anti-religious but IÕm not any longer. The other thing
I do find slightly encouraging is when I talk to people in
a straightforward way I tell them what I think is right and
wrong, and they acknowledge it as being true. They say, ÔYes,
I think youÕre right.Õ
PS:
Are the intellectuals beginning to recognise that youÕre right
too?
TD:
No, I think thereÕs more hope in the people themselves. You
would think that if I talk straight to people and I say: ÔYou
behave in this nasty fashion and actually you are unhappy
because every choice youÕve made in your entire life has been
not only wrong but also stupidÕ, youÕd think that people would
get very angry, but they donÕt get very angry, they say, ÔWell,
yes, you are right.Õ
PS:
But they still donÕt change, do they?
TD:
Well, I think some do change. Of course the problem is that
the change comes late in their lives when it is genuinely
very difficult for them to change. What do you say to a woman
whoÕs got three children by three violent men, none of whom
is supporting her, and whoÕs living on an income of 29 pounds
a week in some God-awful place where sheÕll be beaten up if
she walks out after sundownÑand where if she stays at home
sheÕs going to be burgled? What do you say to someone like
that: ÔTake up basket weaving?!Õ
PS:
Last question. Indulge me. WeÕre sitting here dissecting
the British class structure. WhatÕs your own back-ground?
TD:
I come from a long line of refugees. My mother was a refugee
from Nazi Germany in 1938 and my father was East London Jewish.
But he was able to climb up the social scale very rapidly.
I know one shouldnÕt generalise from oneÕs own experience,
but the one lesson I learned from that is that a class society
is not a closed society. My father was in many respects not
an easy man and he never praised anybodyÑhe thought there
was a zero-sum total of praise in the world, and that any
that you gave to somebody else detracted from the amount that
could be given to him! [laughs]. The single exception was
his teachers from the school he went to in the East End of
London, whom he recognised as the people who had enabled him
easily (not with great difficulty) to get out of the slumsÑit
was just after the First World War. I think he would find
it more difficult now than in 1919Ñand I think thatÕs a terrible
indictment of our society. IÕve still got the school books
they gave him, and theyÕre actually of a much higher standard
than anybodyÕs school books now. Nobody said to him, ÔYou
come from the slums so you donÕt learn Latin.Õ I think thereÕs
been a great misreading of British society in that people
have assumed that because it was a class society it was a
closed society. I think that was not true. But the intelligentsia
insists on saying that itÕs a very closed society and of course,
if you go on and on about it, eventually it becomes true.
I think that weÕve now developed a growing caste where itÕs
become true. I think if I was a child in, say, Smethwick [inner
city Birmingham], how on Earth could I get out of it? The
schools wonÕt help me. But IÕm constantly amazed. You get
a Sikh bus driver and all his children are going to university
and they become doctors and lawyers and businessmen and so
on. So if they can do it, then other people could do it as
well, but I think itÕs more difficult than it was. It was
possible in Britain to go from the bottom to the top in one
generation. ItÕs true that there was snobbery, but I think
part of that was a good thing in that there was a class whose
culture seemed admirable to the people below them.
PS:
Australians talk about the Ôtall poppy syndromeÕ, which youÕve
probably heard ofÑa very strong sense of classlessness, meaning
ÔDonÕt you get above yourselfÕ. And thereÕs a celebration
of the Kelly gang inheritance, and the ÔlarrikinÕ and the
surfer boy beach bum. I wonder whether that sort of stuff
indicates the same sort of problems that you are describing
in Britain?
TD:
I donÕt know Australia well, but itÕs clear to me that
Australia is a class society just like any other society and
the difference is that they donÕt really want to recognise
it. The kind of people IÕve been mixing with since I got here
are clearly not the man in the street! IÕve noticed it in
America too. They tell me Britain is a class society and they
have no class in America, and youÕre sitting round this palatial
table being treated in a grovelling fashion which IÕve never
seen in England! I think I would advise Australians to get
over it and say, ÔItÕs a class society like any other societyÑso
what?Õ The things that really upset people all over the world
are the small signs of disdain, they really get people. ItÕs
not so-called structural injustice.
The
things that really upset people all over the world are the
small signs of disdain, they really get people. ItÕs not so-called
structural injustice
PS:
Theodore Dalrymple, thank you very much for this interview.
Peter
Saunders is the Director of Social Policy Research Programmes
at The Centre for Independent Studies.
Policy
is
the quarterly review of The Centre for Independent Studies.
For more information on subscribing to Policy, click HERE
If you are interested in the Centre's activities and publications,
why not subscribe to e-PreCIS, our regular
email update on the latest news and events.
(e-PreCIS requires
html capable email facilities, such as Microsoft Outlook Express
or Netscape Messenger)
|