In Cornwall, for
many 2012 has been gruelling. Job prospects and real
wages continue to drop away. Housing stock is ever-reducing,
though I see in estate agents' windows second homes being flogged
off in St Ives or St Agnes: not helpful. Cornish folk are strong, and many live in communities which try to look after everyone. Yet even in these close-knit societies people seem near to unravelling.
More and more I encounter a weary resignation, a battered worn-out acceptance of the next affliction or sacrifice demanded. Food
and fuel price rises; dwindling public services; small
businesses starved of cash; the disappointment of the young
unemployed; elderly people too frightened to put an extra bar on the fire.
Cliche? Not any more.
Just recently it’s been the expense, for many the worry of Christmas. And all the time, cruel advertising pounds out the same message: buy more stuff and be quick about it.
We’re
about to enter the fifth year of recession without an end in sight. Banks prosper, everyone else is on their
uppers. This is the Cornwall of Cameron and Clegg; it’s unbelievably
harsh. I don’t know about you, but I’m almost out of Dunkirk spirit.
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