geronimo_appleby
always on the move
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2004
- Posts
- 91,039
If it was just me, I'd stay and tough it out, and wait for the furore and hysteria to die down; I love it here, this is my home, it's where my family's from, where we've lived for almost 900 years. The verbal assaults on my wife, and now the physical assault, that's something else; she collapsed at home and it was only because I recognised what had happened that she's still alive today.
Before the Brexit campaign fanned the flames, there was nothing of note; she was the local primary school doctor, she was one of the nursery and reception storytellers, she was part of village life; if anyone had any objections, they kept it to themselves, apart from the local WI refusing to let her join, then requesting (demanding) that we give them the use of out paddock for their fete, there was nothing that she found particularly objectionable. This feeling of being under attack has been building for probably the last year or so; we've been getting some pretty loud hints that she was becoming a target, elevated verbal, assaults at the hospital, people making gestures and passing comments behind her in queue's, shopkeepers ignoring her or being rude and speaking to her like she was retarded, because all foreigners are retarded, right? that's why you have to speak to them slowly and as insultingly as possible.
London may be diluting the effect, but out here in the sticks it's plain and obvious, and she's scared about what comes next. No matter what the result, the hate and xenophobia that was so much a part of the 'Leave' campaign was going to remain long after the anger at the result has faded. The 'Leave' supporters now believe they have carte-blanche to attack all foreigners, because everything's their fault. When you deal with simpletons, you should expect simplistic reasoning.
Now she drives around in my battered old Defender, because someone in the village keyed her beautiful XK120 hard enough to crease the metal, the people in the local shops don't see her, so we shop in Oxford, which is causing even more rumblings in the village, as we don't spend any money anywhere there anymore. Why should we? These people are our neighbours, Lori used to treat their kids, now they act like they're going to catch something foreign from her. It's apparently enough for them to know she's from foreign parts, and to the local yokels, foreign parts are more objectionable than private parts.
She's even resigned her governorship from the school, which she loved, as she feels she's no longer part of the community; not one person from the village sent her a card or came and saw her to enquire about her health after she came out of hospital, it's like she doesn't exist here any more. So we're going if it works for her on Friday.
see my edit, above. ^^^
The fact of the matter is, there is an extraordinary amount of work that needs to be done. I don't know about your neck of the woods, but here in the mighty US our transportation infrastructure is amazingly primitive and inadequate. We waste literally millions of man-hours every day as our population is trapped in traffic jams, attempting to commute. The southwestern portion of the country is slowly dying of thirst, because the water diversion program that was designed to solve this problem in the 1960s was never built. We don't have enough electrical power plants; here on the west coast we are being advised that there will be blackouts this summer, especially during heat waves where elderly people die without air conditioning. We don't have enough hospitals, and more are being shut down every day due to the rapacious for-profit "reform" under Obamacare.