The Guardian - 31.08.2019

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Section:GDN 1J PaGe:2 Edition Date:190831 Edition:01 Zone: Sent at 30/8/2019 18:12 cYanmaGentaYellowbla



  • The Guardian Sat urday 31 Aug ust 2019


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to rule out. David Cameron had some of the
same stuff , exemplifi ed by his “ Flashman”
persona and the idiotic decision to call
the 2016 referendum in the fi rst place. But Johnson is
something else again. Encouraged by his close adviser,
Dominic Cummings (who seems to me not so much
the genius of Tory imaginings, but someone who has
cottoned on to the fact that if the modern political
right is to win, it has to be utterly reckless), he has
seemingly decided not just that Brexit must happen at
the end of October, but that what he does between now
and the conclusion of a general election will be based
on the supposed division between “the people” and
parliament, with the latter portrayed as the acme of all
the liberal arrogance that Brexiteers have projected on
to remain supporters.
It says something about the decay of our most basic
democratic institutions that the House of Commons
presents such an easy target. If we have had any recent
national conversation about the state of our democracy,
by far the loudest voices have been those dismal
provocateurs concentrated in the right wing press, who
would have you believe that MPs are corrupt, entitled
people who should be paid as little as possible. For these
people, Brexit was a gift: a chance to take the supposed
division to its logical conclusion, while performing
a classic act of bullying: giving a body of people an
impossible job, and then raging at them for their
inability to do it.

B


ut there is also something deeper at
play. For all that it remains the best
model of government and politics
human beings have yet come up with,
in the 21st century, representative
democracy is a very tough sell. When
people spend half their lives online and
can experience at least the sensation of
agency and instant gratifi cation, the idea that we elect
MPs to exercise their own judgment and then eventually
submit their record for approval or rejection can easily
seem woefully old-fashioned. I have lost count of the
number of people I have met over the last few years who
have angrily told me that the function of the Commons
was to simply “do our bidding”.
In a recent YouGov poll , 63% of respondents agreed
that MPs must “act according to the wishes of their
constituents, even when this goes against their own
judgment”, a fi gure that reached 78% among leave
voters and – at which point Edmund Burke spins in his
grave – 81% of Tory supporters. It is no accident that,
like so many populist forces, Nigel Farage’s Brexit party
claims to be in favour of direct democracy. Whatever
its dangers, it is an idea that may be perfectly suited to
a future of easy and instant everything, and the clarion
call Amazon now suggests its customers ask their digital
assistants: “Alexa, where’s my stuff ?”
These things threaten to further the development of
a turbulent, volatile, almost amoral politics. If we are
going to stand any chance of averting such disasters, we
will have to not just make the case for representative
government, but rebuild and reform the local, regional
and national institutions of our democracy, a task
every bit as urgent as the need to make the UK more
economically equal, and one that the political left has so
far not paid nearly enough attention to.
In contrast to the forces on the other side who are
currently running rampant, so far, we have neither
the ideas nor the language to even start – so, in the
meantime, politics is going to carry on channelling
awful division and opening up profound dangers. To
paraphrase the 20th-century communist Antonio
Gramsci , it is not so much that the old world is dying
and the new cannot be born: it is that the only vivid
and coherent vision of the future of power and politics
on off er is currently being off ered by irresponsible
chancers, whose chief concern is not the ghouls they are
letting loose, but their own survival.
Their opportunity lies in the chasm between this
week’s protests and the millions of people who either
avert their eyes or see them as so much liberal, remainer
nonsense; it is also our side’s greatest challenge, whose
urgency, even now, has yet to sink in.

Earlier this month Donald Trump accused the man he
had appointed to run the United States Federal Reserve,
Jerome Powell, of being an “enemy”. His public dressing
down of the central bank chair, who is supposed to be
independent, was accompanied by further escalations
of the US–China trade war. Mr Trump wants Mr Powell
to lower rates to spur growth in the sputtering US
economy and give him the upper hand with Beijing.
This incompetence and bluster is hardly inspiring global
confi dence. It was a coincidence, however, that on the
same day the Bank of England’s governor, Mark Carney,
warned the annual gathering of the world’s central
bankers that the global economy was becoming over-
reliant on the dollar. That may have been fi ne when the US
was viewed as a responsible leader of the world economy.
Mr Carney plainly thinks that is not the case today.
There are reasons to worry. Almost every nation is
tied to the monetary policy of the US. More than half
of all trade invoices are in dollars, as are nine-tenths
of all foreign exchange transactions. Since the 2008
global crash, corporate and government levels of dollar
debt in the emerging world have rocketed, leading to
fi nancial instability. Despite the Trump administration’s
volatility and belligerence, the dollar keeps rising in
value. It matters not that the US Fed cut rates in July:
investors want to put their money into greenbacks.
This is no new phenomenon: the US’s “exorbitant
privilege” was noted decades ago.
Yet with great power comes great responsibility,
as the US found out when forced to stabilise fi nancial

The argument that some behaviour is “in our genes” is
distrusted by the left. Too often it is used to whitewash
terrible injustices. Yet it cannot be entirely dismissed.
Certain patterns of behaviour and thought, such as the
faculty of language acquisition, are very clearly a part
of our genetic inheritance as a species. The instinct for
justice itself appears to arise spontaneously in small
children. The escape from the idea that genes determine
our fate is not to pretend that they have no infl uence,
but to come to understand that they can have many
diff erent, often confl icting infl uences, even within the
same people and certainly within populations. This is
true both of their eff ects on behaviour and on bodies.
Biology is a science that deals with variations. There is
no one perfect type of a species. Diversity, in this sense,
is not just something to aim at but something necessary
for a population to fl ourish. The idea that natural
selection works only on mutations is a deeply misleading
oversimplifi cation. It is much more likely to alter the
proportions of an already existing mixture of genes.
What is more, game theory shows that the balance of
advantage will shift as a result of the shift in a gene’s
frequency. With very few exceptions, such as the change
that Noam Chomsky postulates makes possible the
complexity of human syntax, few mutations are going
to be so overwhelmingly advantageous that they drive
out all other variants. More often, if any one variation
becomes dominant, there will be an advantage for its
opposite. “Normal” is thus a shifting, fuzzy category.
This is especially true of the genes which can

markets during the worst fi nancial crisis since the
Great Crash of 1929. The US Fed engaged in loans,
guarantees and outright purchases of fi nancial assets
that were not only unprecedented but cumulatively
amounted to $29tn. This staggering amount is twice
the size of the nation’s GDP.
Mr Carney’s solution was to call for the emergence
of alternative international reserve currencies. He
thought it would be a good idea to create a new
“synthetic hegemony currency”, to make the global
monetary and fi nancial system more “diverse”. Yet
the problem is that before any currency can replace
the dollar, world markets have to develop a great
deal of trust in a new international lender of last
resort. Right now that is the US Fed – which is why Mr
Trump’s attacks are so disconcerting. The president’s
failure to grasp macroeconomics is terrifying. The
US trade defi cit, which drives the president crazy,
means that the US is a net importer of capital.
That means that the US government provides
safe US dollar assets so it is hard to see how the
trade defi cit can be eliminated without damaging
the global fi nancial system. John Maynard Keynes
worried in 1944 that the Bretton Woods system could
rely on the dollar only as long as America had a trade
surplus, and the moment the US became a defi cit
country, the system would collapse. That is what
happened in 1971. Mr Carney echoed this sentiment
in his speech, noting “past instances of very low rates
have tended to coincide with high-risk events such
as wars, fi nancial crises and breaks in the monetary
regime”. Mr Trump’s concern that the dollar is too
strong may be reasonable. But his unpredictable
actions are making the problem much worse. Tariff s
and interest rate cuts will not lower its value. In the
short term, some kind of concerted international
action by central banks could bring the value of the
dollar down. But that would need a volte-face from
the Trump administration and a commitment to
abandoning trade and currency wars.

infl uence human behaviour and emotional
predispositions. Not only is the chain of causation
from gene expression to behaviour unimaginably
complex , it is also profoundly aff ected by outside
circumstances. Identical twins, who share the same
DNA, are not identical people, because they cannot
entirely share the same life and experiences.
What science can do, under these circumstances,
is to look for correlations between DNA sequences
and observable behaviour. The correlations can,
at best, give pointers towards where causes might
be found. The latest eff ort has been to see if there
is a genetic cause for homosexuality and the result
is clear. There isn’t.
Using a data set of nearly half a million people,
of whom 27,000 reported same sex contact ,
researchers found – in their own words – “In
aggregate, all tested genetic variants ... do not
allow meaningful prediction of an individual’s
sexual behaviour”. There are fi ve loci which
appear to have a measurable, though far from
decisive, infl uence on sexual preference. Some are
also involved with the sense of smell, and one is
associated with male pattern baldness.
This leads to perhaps the most interesting feature
of the research: it not only shows that there is no
clear genetic cause for same sex attraction, but that
the attraction itself does not form a coherent whole.
Some of the genetic variations weakly associated
with same sex behaviour are diff erent in men and
women. In place of the old idea that there might be a
single cause for a single pattern of behaviour, there is
now an understanding of multiple causes for varying
patterns of behaviour. In place of a single scale of
sexual attraction as posited by Kinsey, in which desire
for the same sex and opposite sex are linked so that
more of one means less of the other, the researchers
suggest that these are independent variables.
Diversity is good in itself and humans are more –
much more – than the sum of their genes.




 Continued from front

The fruitless search for


a ‘ gay gene’ shows the


complexity of biology


Genetics


Dollar dominance


Trump thinks he can bully


the Fed into lowering US


interest rates. That’s bad


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‘Comment is free... but facts are sacred’ CP Scott


Parliament is being bullied.


But millions just don’t care


John Harris


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