Hunter S Thompson wrote one of the great American novels: Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. I thought it was funny from the first sentence.
He also wrote Fear and Loathing: on the Campaign Trail ’72 (covering the Democratic Party presidential campaign for the Rolling Stone magazine) which I’ve not read, but maybe I should, given that he’s not been writing about our current general election campaign (more's the pity). This is mostly because he killed himself in 2005. His ashes were in classic Gonzo style subsequently fired out of a cannon in a ceremony funded by Johnny Depp.
Thompson would surely have felt at home in our general election, and would have found ways of making it more bearable than I have managed. As he apparently once said "I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me.”
In coming to a decision on how to vote, many seem have found themselves caught between this fear and loathing (perhaps, apprehension and distaste is a bit more accurate) and have decided to vote for the party whose leader they find pretty distasteful for fear the other lot get in and heap catastrophe upon inevitably mis-managed disaster.
Put like that, the choice seems a straightforward one, but how disappointing it has to be couched so negatively. I keep reading about the dilemma; indeed it is clearly felt by people across parties and across the Brexit divide.
As for me, well, I might have felt more positive about the whole sorry affair had there been a grown-up discussion of environmental issues in the campaign, but there wasn't ...
This will be the last post on my University of Bath blog. I've been posting since June 10th 2009 but, 15 years and 2499 posts later, I really have to close it down if I'm to realise my 2010 retirement...
Extracts from three pre-election readings: I'm reading Rory Stewart's warts 'n' all book about his time as an MP for Penrith and the Border, the constituency I was born and grew up in. He writes about the difficulty of being...
In the most recent SEEd Newsletter (essential reading), Ann Finlayson writes: "I recently came across an amazing diagram on LinkedIn (Katherine Hayhoe, Climate Scientist, What can we do about climate change?) which was a version of a theory of change and...