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[personal profile] webofevil
Once again, the government outflanks me. Once again, if I’d said that this was what the Tories would oversee once in office, I’d have been shouted down as hysterical, grotesquely distorting the motives and intentions of those I didn’t agree with like some mirror-image Jeremy Clarkson. From the Diary of a Benefit Scrounger last Saturday:
I have severe Crohn's disease. Probably one of the most severe cases in the country.

I have had 7 major life saving operations to remove over 30 obstructions (blockages) from my bowel.

I take chemo-shots every two weeks that suppress my immune system, ensuring that I regularly have to fight infections. Exhaustion, pain and nausea plague every single day of my life.

I have osteoporosis and malnutrition.

I have had major seizures and a stroke.

Nonetheless, I have just heard from my own Disability Living Allowance application, that it has been rejected. Completely. I will receive no support at all from DLA. Despite claiming successfully in the past, despite only getting weaker and more frail and less able to live independently, my reconsideration was rejected.

The only option now is to appeal. I will have to fill in a horribly complicated appeal form over the Xmas period, wait up to one year to go to tribunal, and probably go bankrupt in the mean time.

The state will pay thousands to hear my appeal.

The only conclusion I can come to is that if I don't qualify for DLA, no-one with bowel disease can. [Diary of a Benefit Scrounger]
This is not an error by a rogue assessor—in fact it's firmly in line with what the assessors are tasked with doing. Equally, it’s no error by the DWP, which has been steadily churning out publicity discrediting any and all welfare recipients, releasing a steady stream of tales of cheating and riotously implausible excuses—though, when questioned about those examples or indeed about flagrant mistreatment of claimants like Sue Marsh, it claims with almost touchingly childlike dishonesty that it “cannot comment on individual cases”. (You’ll recognise the phrase from when other government departments or the police have also ballsed up or lied.)

No, this is straightforward coalition policy. It’s austerity logic: if she is no longer classified as disabled, the state will not have to waste any more of its precious resources on her. People like her are being “cured” up and down the country. Seriously, it’s like fucking Lourdes out there.

The coalition faces a challenge, though. Distasteful though the idea might be, disability can affect decent sorts too—even right-wingers. And the more of them who find themselves turned down for benefit claims they were previously and legitimately entitled to, or are found “fit for work” against all the evidence, the more resistance the coalition might encounter to its arbitrary benefit-slashing wheeze.

The trouble is, the government can’t rely on anyone useful in Parliament to stick up for it. The only people prepared to defend its targeting of disability benefits are, by definition, able-bodied affluent types, and even then there aren’t many prepared to stick their heads over that particular parapet (it’s political correctness gone mad, etc). What the coalition needs is a disabled Uncle Tom, a Quisling on wheels—someone who’s prepared, from a wheelchair or maybe even a dialysis machine, to cheer it on in the Chamber. “Won’t someone free us from the tyranny of benefit payments?” they could weakly cry. “I’d have been on my feet years ago if the state hadn’t been paying me to stay supine!” They could be wheeled out to amp up the DWP’s mood music in interviews, on discussion shows, even on—apologies—the stump.

But who could the coalition find to play this role? All the candidates with suitably disabling or debilitating conditions are pro-disability zealots, ideologically opposed to being stripped of their slush funds and thrown off the gravy train. There’s only one sensible answer—someone will have to take one for the team. Maybe a deal can be done with a couple of the Lib Dem peers so keen to reform the Lords, a quid pro quo: we’ll railroad through the elected Chamber you favour, and in return we get to break your legs. Finally, after the setbacks of tuition fees, Europe and voting reform, you get to proclaim an unequivocal Lib Dem win, and all you have to do is give up the use of your kidneys. You’ll be saving your party, your government and your parliament—and helping to plug one of society’s biggest financial drains into the bargain. Now, has your Lordship ever seen the film Misery?

For some reason, the following never seems to be mentioned in this context—the elephant in the Chamber—but surely nothing could be more pertinent. Before he became Prime Minister, David Cameron suffered the terrible loss of a son who had severe epilepsy and cerebral palsy. If that son had lived, he would have required intensive day-to-day caring. How would the PM have reacted to him being turned down for benefit or even generally treated as workshy? Or is it just brutally simple for millionaires—the issue of benefits never even arises because their family will always provide?

Date: 2011-12-20 03:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hano.livejournal.com
we’ll railroad through the elected Chamber you favour, and in return we get to break your legs

Shame they don't volunteer IDS to have his legs broken. There's a long queue of volunteers who'll happily do it for free. And slowly.
What makes me even more incandescent with rage over all this is the absolute failure of the Labour Party to provide any kind of opposition or even moral leadership on this. Isn't sticking up for those that can't stick up for themselves what the Labour Party is for? Instead, trying to find Ed Milliband saying anything on this turns into a futile game of political Where's Waldo? Bastards

Date: 2011-12-20 04:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quercus.livejournal.com
Is the Labour Party being very dumb or very smart?

Labour are suffering the absence of a genuine Nye Bevan character, or even anyone of the stature of either an honest and/or competent Kinnock or T. Dan Smith. This current doom isn't 1948 by along chalk, and back then we managed to _establish_ the NHS - in an Olympic year, and on less budget too.

So in the absence of an attractive Labour party, are they merely hiding out of the limelight and watching the other two tear the Liberals apart? Then six months before an election, they pop back up again and offer an alternative to the Tories that isn't wholly discredited. Having done nothing for a couple of years, there's less than usual to hold against them.

Recycle a few of Obama's blander (and hardly used) "Hope" posters, and there's a Labour election campaign.

Date: 2011-12-20 04:31 pm (UTC)
ext_58972: Mad! (Default)
From: [identity profile] autopope.livejournal.com
I fear your optimism may be misplaced.

Date: 2011-12-20 05:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gonzo21.livejournal.com
I sadly have to agree.

Nothing I've seen of Labour policy since they lost the election speaks of them having understood any of the important lessons they need to come to terms with to become an electable party again.

Their whole policy of 'let's just sit quietly by and hope the Tories cock things up so spectacularly we get voted back in by default' might be a viable policy, but it's not a very smart one.

Date: 2011-12-20 05:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quercus.livejournal.com
I wouldn't claim this was optimism, just a grim interpretation of how vacuous current Labour is. Marketing is no substitute for politics, even if it does get a slightly less vile set of bums on the front bench.

Date: 2011-12-20 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chiller.livejournal.com
Yup. I know literally dozens of people who, were they to occupy the sweet spot Ed Miliband finds himself in, would devote themselves to destroying the Tories with enthusiasm, athleticism and a virtually solid gold guarantee of success. I cannot recall in my lifetime a situation where a government had set themselves up as perfectly to be knocked down, discredited and destroyed. Yet what we have is wabby little exchanges of insults at PMQ, and no bollocks, no spine, no fire.

I am in a state of political despair and bafflement about this, and I am not alone.

Date: 2011-12-20 04:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hano.livejournal.com
You're ascribing a competence to the Labour leadership that I don't believe exists. Given their completely inept handling of things so far, and their seeming inability to articulate any kind of alternative to the constant narrative of 'Labour caused the debt', don't expect any sort of miraculous recovery anytime soon.

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