The canonisation of Saint Jo Cox appears to be complete. Not
content with St Andrew’s Day, St David’s Day and the splendidly screwy St Paddy’s
Day a new national day has been declared by people so determined to harvest every
scrap of political capital they can wring from the increasingly frayed damp rag
that is Brendan Cox’s public grief. They are proposing street parties to celebrate
the diversity that she so heartily welcomed. I’ve heard of rubbing the right’s
nose in it but isn’t this rather shoving everybody’s schnozz full of bullshit and
sticking two fingers up to all who voted the other way?
Wait a minute though; street parties? Celebration? What
is there to celebrate? Her side lost and badly so, because she represented much
that has gone wrong in the west in recent decades. If anything Jo Cox Day should
be adopted, Guy Fawkes-style, as a symbol of all we rejected. If she were alive
today she would be vocal in resistance to the notion of making St George’s Day
a public holiday in England, a recognition which some have campaigned for years
to bring about. Jo Cox was no saint.
In fact, before her unnecessary – although some might say
timely – murder (for, let’s not pretend it wasn’t a genuine horror) she was relatively
unknown outside the Labour activist circle. Their brand of vibrant, multicultural
insanity was part of what we voted to reject and even the national outrage at
the event did not sway the ballot no matter how hard it was milked and how much
we were publicly denounced for supposedly enabling her killer. Her real
significance was minor and this prolonging of the agony is last gasp
opportunism for those who refuse to face reality.
Although I, like many others, was not particularly moved
by the death of Diana, Princess of Wales the country practically lost its mind
when she died. The national and very public outpouring of genuine grief was marked
by a profound absence of stoic British dignity and a descent into a maudlin
fascination with other people’s private loss. But even after that sea of floral
tributes, that public display of hurt, the demand for answers and the profound if
short-lived slump in support for the Queen, which Blair and cronies exploited
with ill-concealed glee, there is still no formal annual remembrance, even though she had the
decency to pop her clogs on a Bank Holiday.
Compare and contrast...
Call me callous, but long after the strident attempts to
revive a memory most of us have already filed under ‘who cares’ there is one
event which will be a real cause for continued and genuine celebration. Forget calls
for Diana Day, Stephen Lawrence Day, Madeleine McCann Day and Doris Day.
Instead, if you really want to stir up sentiment, if you really want to rub
some people’s noses in it and if you want to annually remind people of the national
insanity we narrowly avoided, if you really want an annual celebration in June,
then raise a glass to Brexit Day.
This woman dies a terrible, wicked death, and I would not wish that on her at all. Those responsible for her death should face the maximum penalty.
ReplyDeleteI disagreed with everything this woman stood for. She was fanatic. She was wrong. The left and the "progressive liberals" "weaponised" her murder in Project Grief: if you vote leave, you are assuming direct responsibility for the death of Saint Jo
It was one of the most disturbing and vicious political campaigns I have ever seen.
And although I am not particularly a "conspiracy theorist", I know I am not alone in finding the timing and circumstances of this wicked murder odd, to say the least. Leaving aside IRA related murder (Airey Neave, Brighton)the first political assassination in the UK just 8 days before the EU Referendum is, well...