All We Need is Love
Did the Beatles have it right?
Back in the Sixties, the Beatles were on to something in their anthem: “All you need is love”. That song, along with Lennon’s later “Imagine’ , combined to project an image of a loving, peaceful world, in which differences are not simply tolerated, but celebrated; a world in which the economic divisions – between the “haves” and the “have nots” – are dissolved through the simple strategy of rejected the personal ownership; a world where the ideological differences are similarly dissolved, through the dissolution of religion; a world in which people live in peace.
Critics of the sixties are quick to point how simplistic and unrealistic this “All-you-need-is-love” agenda is; how this kind of sloganising – Imagine: all you need is love – produced no noticeable improvement in the state of the world.
(Although the 60s and 70s did see some changes. In Australia we saw the introduction of Medicare – a scheme to ensure that everybody had access to quality health care. We saw the introduction equal pay for equal work – replacing the old system in which women were paid much less than men: it was actually built in to the pay scales. We saw the extension of notions of social justice – the notion that there should be programs to assist and support the poor. We saw a shift towards a safety net for the unemployed. And then there was the fact that FREE tertiary education was a reality in those backward days.)
If all if this is ringing bells of recognition in your minds, let me help you ot. It’s a re-run of the scene from the Python film, The Life of Brian, the one that begins with the rhetorical question, “What have the Romans ever done for us?”, and ends with: “Well, apart from better sanitation, and medicine and education and irrigation and public health and roads and a freshwater system and baths and public order – what have the Romans ever done for us?” And the answer is, “Brought peace”.
The sixties and seventies were the period during which the American civil rights movement and the feminist movement both made deep inroads into social thinking. That period wasn’t a golden age, when everything was so much better than now; but it was an age of significant change – and for the most part, change in the right direction.
But we moved on, didn’t we, to the 80s and 90s, and watched as the gains of the 60s and 70s were whittled away. The anthems of the 80s and 90s seem to have been a whole lot more effective. All you need is “economic rationalism”; all you need is “user pays”; all you need is to give free rein to the entrepreneurs and all of us will be better off – in the long run.
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Post CommentMyron Lysenko
On February 10, 2008 at 7:34 pm
This is a thoughtful and humane piece, Barry. You are correct in your arguments. Will anything be done to improve the situation soon?