The dawn of a new year is usually a time of hope and ambition, of dreams for the future and thoughts of a better life. But it is a long time since many of us looked forward to the new year with such anxiety, even dread.
Here in Britain, many economists believe that by the end of 2012 we could well have slipped into a second devastating recession. The Coalition remains delicately poised; it would take only one or two resignations to provoke a wider schism and a general election.
Meanwhile, as the eurozone slides towards disaster, the prospects for Europe have rarely been bleaker. Already the European elite have installed compliant technocratic governments in Greece and Italy, and with the markets now putting pressure on France, few observers can be optimistic that the Continent can avoid a total meltdown.
As commentators often remark, the world picture has not been grimmer since the dark days of the mid-Seventies, when the OPEC oil shock, the rise of stagflation and the surge of nationalist terrorism cast a heavy shadow over the Western world.
For the most chilling parallel, though, we should look back exactly 80 years, to the cold wintry days when 1931 gave way to 1932.
The vicious circle of history.
ReplyDeleteNo escaping the beast.
No escaping the beast.
ReplyDeleteWell said.
There may be no escaping the beast but you can fight the beast. As Hercules found out in his struggle against the Lernaean Hydra you may be defeated if you try to fight the beast alone but with help and some divine intervention you can succeed. Whether you yield the sword or the torch you must continue to struggle against the beast and the rest is up to the Creator....
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year!
ReplyDelete