SO yesterday was my birthday and I was looking forward to a lovely night out with friends. My plan was to gather at the Egg Cafe, Liverpool’s eating place for veggies. 

I even had them put aside a portion of Fennel Bake, my favourite dinner! Then I was going to head off to The Philharmonic Pub for drinks. 

Did they really decide to f*ck up the planet
even when they knew they were f*cking it up? 

I was excited. I even had friends travelling from Manchester and Lancaster to spend time with me.

But then the winds came. And the red alerts. And the warnings of “don’t travel unless absolutely necessary.” 

Everton cancelled their home game because the weather was unsafe. Up the road in Manchester, Manchester City did the same. Staff at the Philharmonic Hall were sent home early for their own safety. 

There would be no birthday gathering for me. The weather had other ideas, and boy did it blow.

Meanwhile, the other half of the country was under water. 

How weak we are in the face of nature, especially a nature so ill treated by humanity, that climate change wreaks such a terrible response.

Although, climate change doesn’t exist does it? That’s what the powerful tell us, those whose short term interests are tied in with the destruction of the planet. 

They have built a whole ideology and pseudo science around denying it all. 

It is the latest in a history of the powerful taking positions that we look aghast at 50 to 100 years on. 

The sort of standpoint that forces our children to look wide eyed and say: “Wow! You’re joking right? People used to really think that?” 

Yes, they really did. 

Childsweep2'Good ideas' of the pastThey thought children should work in factories or up chimneys. They thought maternity pay should never be paid. They thought people should be captured and kept as slaves. They thought apartheid should exist.

They thought women shouldn’t have the right to vote. They thought that the minimum wage should not be introduced. They thought that gay people should be imprisoned or, later, not allowed to marry. They thought the poor should be sent to the workhouse. They thought that people should not get health care when they are ill, unless they could afford it. 

And we look back at them aghast. Really? They thought this? 

Our force of collective humanity won changes to all of this, and swept these backward, venal ideas aside. 

It seems almost a characteristic of right wing thought that we look back at it open mouthed and shake our heads that there was ever a time when anybody seriously thought these things were okay. 

But there was. And indeed there still is. 

'Good Ideas' Of The PastAnd thisWe have today’s issues, where history will one day shake its head at the positions of the powerful.

Did they really do that? Did they really imprison people in detention centres simply because they were seeking asylum here? Did they really have people dependent on food banks to survive? Did they really have a bedroom tax? Really? A bedroom tax?? Did they really give billions in bonuses to bankers while driving the poor to suicide? Did they really have people on zero hours contracts? Did they really say that people dying of cancer were “fit to work”? 

And did they really believe that there was no such thing as climate change even when we were frequently under water or hidden away from winds?

Did they really cut down rainforests? 

Did they really dump waste into the sea? 

Did they really decide to f*ck up the planet even when they knew they were f*cking it up? 

There has always been an exasperated “really?” that gasps from the future. 

Staines-Fallon-1-522X293 

It is the sound that guides us as we stand today for justice, peace, love and care for the planet.

Those of us who connect to that gasp have always been the ones on the side of history, and on the side of humanity. 

Our forebears stood in solidarity with the amazed gasps that they knew we would one day utter.

This gasp from the future remains our guide and our battleground today. 

About the author

Alun ParryAlun Parry

The post above  is the latest from Parrysongs.co.uk, the blog of Liverpool-based Alun Parry who is regarded as one of the UK’s foremost folk songwriters, specialising in stories of social history and the human condition.

Outside of music Alun is a social documentary film maker who also runs creativity and wellbeing workshops, and is a trainee psychotherapist. He was the founder of fan-owned, non league football team AFC Liverpool.

Whenthesunlightshines1400x1400-300X300
As a birthday offer, Alun's latest album, (rather ironically) titled When The Sun Shines, is available half price, for just £7.50 before Valentine's Day ends here 

You can see him live with Joe Solo at the View Two Gallery in Mathew Street on Feb 28 as part of a gig to celebrate Liverpool Acoustic's birthday 

Alun will also be performing in a full spoken word plus music show called Love Hope & Resistance at the Bluecoat on May 1, “a celebration of solidarity and the human spirit”.