The Powers and The Oppressed

There is so much that could be written under such a title – several books worth, but I will keep this brief!

Standing up for the oppressed and more importantly helping them realise that they are empowered and therefore powerful is likely to get you sidelined, silenced, imprisoned, exiled or killed. Paolo Freire did exactly this in Brasil through an amazing education program and was indeed exiled. Jesus did it in 1st Century Palestine and he ended up crucified.

The powers are completely fearful of a multitude who begin to see that the status quo does not have to be maintained, who hear that their voice is important and just as valid as that of the powers and then begin to use their voices to call for something entirely different.

I am discovering that in the middle classes, we have enough power to believe that we are not really oppressed (which btw is not true, because we are slaves to a system in which we are either passive or complicit without meaning to be) and so we are actually pretty ok for things to stay much the way things are. An overwhelming passivity has gripped us and we have become numb to the news cycles that might previously have shaken us to something wholly more radical…..The powers do not really fear the middle classes, unless….unless a people movement begins that does not have the ego at the fore. For change to occur we need to be concerned with the need of others before ourselves…..and this takes a change of our hearts…..

But, the marginalised……if they really found and used their voice……if they refused to be silenced……if the middle classes refused to stay silent on their behalf…… If the oppressed threw off the shackles and realised they are princes and not slaves, as God calls them…..well, that would be exciting. Is it beyond our imaginations? Conversations springing up all over the place that could change the world?!

Food Banks

I had a fascinating conversation this week with a lady who was telling me she doesn’t really like food banks. It’s not because she thinks they are unnecessary or has some dimwitted view of the world. It’s because she realised that in the one she works in, most of the food handed out is processed, high in salt content and generally bad for people.

Instead she has started doing something, which I think is remarkable. She is befriending everyone who comes to the food bank, putting together a parcel, including a knife, a potato peeler, some washing up liquid and a scrubbing-brush/cloth and she goes to their house with them. She helps them clean their kitchen, has an honest chat about money, works out the most basic of shopping budgets, takes them to a supermarket and then teaches them to cook some cheap but nutritious meals. She’s not a superhero, she knows what it is to have very little and to be a single mum with significant health problems, but she’s determined that life at the bottom does not have to be lonely and it does not have to be full of dregs. On the contrary it can become a place of great creativity and love!

Some Good News from 38 Degrees

An encouraging email from the 38 degrees campaign group today. Protest does work! People movements can change things.

Dear Andy

Some very, very good news. We did it! The government has accepted our amendment to the hospital closure clause in the House of Lords. [1]

Without our amendment the hospital closure clause would have given the government new powers to close any hospital in England, even if local doctors were against it.

The clause was voted through by MPs back in March, after the government made some concessions. Their changes didn’t go far enough, but it seemed like the government wouldn’t budge any further.

The clause was due to be passed today. So the government’s decision to accept – almost word for word – the changes proposed by lawyers funded by 38 Degrees members came right down to the wire – and it was a big surprise.

Our people powered pressure worked and our hospitals are now safer. Thank you for everything you’ve done to make this happen. Hurrah!

David Lock QC, an NHS expert lawyer, has checked the government’s changes and here’s what he said:
“This is a very satisfying outcome. It recognises the compelling logic of the position taken by 38 Degrees members.”

38 Degrees members, alongside others like the Save Lewisham Hospital Campaign, have been campaigning on this for months:

  • Over 150,000 of us signed a petition calling for the plans to be scrapped
  • After meeting with 38 Degrees members, Lib Dem MP and ex-health minister Paul Burstow tabled amendments to the clause. The government, fearing a rebellion from within its own ranks, made some concessions but they didn’t go far enough.
  • The campaign then moved to the House of Lords. Baroness Finlay, a well-respected doctor and influential crossbench peer, led the charge. 38 Degrees members funded briefings and advice from legal heavyweights and we wrote to peers. [2]

In the end, everything we did together – alongside other campaigners and parliamentarians like Baroness Finlay, Paul Burstow MP, Andy Burnham MP – worked. The government has made the changes that they needed to.

Regardless of what happened today, we’ve still got a huge amount to do to protect our NHS. But wins like this, especially on the NHS, don’t come along that often. Today gives us more proof that when we work together, we can achieve great things, and make the government sit up and listen. So for today, let’s celebrate.

Thanks for everything you do,

Becky, Blanche, Rachel, Ian, Rebecca, Maddy and the rest of the 38 Degrees team

PS: Here’s what Baroness Finlay said:
“I am delighted that the Government have recognised the need for equity and the importance of safeguarding good patient services in a population.

The campaign to achieve this would not have been as effective without the support of 38 Degrees members.”