Thursday, 29 January 2026

Attitude, Tone, Confrontation, Public Discourse

My husband Tony is a borough councillor. For friends not in England, a borough is a town or a district. Ours is Hastings borough, which includes St Leonards as well as Hastings since they're effectively the same place. Within the borough we have wards, smaller residential areas, and each councillor is elected by the residents of the ward s/he then goes on to serve.

Because of his involvement in local politics I take a little more notice of what's going on around me than I might otherwise. So today, after a (local) meeting last night to do with the (national) government requirements for housing targets in our borough, I read carefully through the comments on a social media post giving a report n the meeting.
 
People said things like this: 

What they mean is more backhands in councillors’ pockets… 
 and in reply
 nothing beats the brown envelopes the council love them.

We can have our say but................makes no difference as its already decided amongst themselves. Just makes it appear that they care !!!

You most probably have made your minds up what you are going to do, how about the people of Hastings getting a vote to who they would like on the council.

Spend the money to re-elect all council, planner members and elect actual local people who live in Hastings to make decisions, get rid of the current people who have been doing nothing for years. We need people with common sense, hearts and brains.

This is what you get when you for for the left…

Share our views and then totally disregard them and do whatever they want anyway!!!!

No one's listening, so it will go ahead no mater what we think !

So issue we keep having reoccurring - water mains failure for large portions of the current town. Service provider claiming that they can't provide internet to houses/flats due to no space in cabinets with no plan to expand. Road ways that are some of the worst in the country struggling to keep up with current levels of traffic. A town that routinely floods due to poor drainage. A hospital, GP surgeries and dental practices that struggles to meet the needs of the local area due to expansion already exceeding limitations of what they can manage.
To put it simply, don't invite the town to a BBQ when you've got one pack of sausages. Don't even expect you to fix the issues, just start making a damn plan.

And how many of these so called homes go to people on the waiting list in hastings and surrounding and how many go to people that live no where near or of boats every year uou build houses and every year thoes that have been on waiting list or homeless get over looked cus there given to people from London and such like seriously its about bloody time you lot woke up and thought of your OWN people in your OWN town befor others 

 
I'm sure you get the drift. In case you were wondering — no, there are no "backhands" or "brown envelopes". Our councillors neither give nor accept bribes, nor are even offered them. 

They work punishingly long hours. The meeting under discussion by those commenters had a preparation document running to 400 pages, which each councillor had to assimilate and understand, ready to answer questions; and that's just one meeting of many similar, in addition to ward responsibilities and heavy correspondence. 

Today my husband has gone to meet with a local group focusing on mental health for men, and will go on from there to meet with two women who have had huge success in organising and running a volunteer group to manage the rose gardens on the sea front, securing a partnership with the David Austin Roses that provides new plants and information on their care. When he gets home, there will be the day's crop of emails, typically about 150, to read and respond to before his evening meetings.

I know several of the councillors personally; they are serious-minded, courteous, committed, intelligent and astonishingly hard-working. They won their seats in fair elections, and have made admirable wins in improving things in our borough — most notably the finances, which were teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, and now are not.

I am no longer surprised but still always disappointed, to see instance after instance of ignorance, rudeness and contempt in the comments people leave about the council on social media; the unquestioned assumptions, the sourness, the cynicism. I wish we could do better.

Looking beyond our borough to national politics and civic life, I see more of the same thing. An example is the recent choice of Dame Sarah Mulally as Archbishop of Canterbury. Leaving aside entirely whether she would have been my choice, I have been taken aback by the spite and vitriol poured out by her fellow Church of England priests — many of whom have been quick to call the election and the woman herself satanic (because she is not a man).

Another example (take your pick, there are so many) is the instance of self-styled citizen journalists using their phones to film in sensitive areas (eg around asylum hotels) or in sensitive encounters (eg with the police or with TV licence inspectors). 

Concerned by reports of police aggression and incompetence, and intrusive inspectors overstepping proper boundaries, I have watched a number of such videos, only to conclude that the "citizen journalists" brought their problems on themselves — provocatively rude to the police, to the inspectors, to officials of every kind.

Perhaps I've just been unlucky in the videos I've seen and the comments I've read; it is always possible. But it seems unlikely.

I think we have reached a place where a reset of attitude and tone would be helpful. Yes, it is responsible to speak truth to power, to counter injustice, to take seriously our rôle as citizens; but with courtesy, with respect, and bringing the assumption that people in public office are doing their best. 

With this in mind, I came across this video (inset below this paragraph) about the troubles in Minnesota and the shooting of Alex Pretti. I haven't so far watched any of the video footage recording what happened (though I will), but that's not exactly what the video below is about. It's more about extrapolating relevant principles to apply in the way we conduct ourselves. I found it very sane and sensible, and I hope you will, too.


10 comments:

  1. I was reading your book, The Wounds of God, this evening. (so beautiful - thank you) I decided to check out your blog and am so glad I did. The video at the end is the best analysis of the Minnesota debacle I have seen. Thank you for sharing it. I do believe I will be checking your blog frequently now. Thank you for your contribution to literature and the online space. ❤️

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    1. Waving to you, Mary — thank you!
      This blog, it's just a place to sit down by my fire, and share thoughts, have a chat about ordinary things. Come by whenever you want some company. x

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  2. I so appreciate your writing, and was so glad when you started to blog again. I agree with the text of your post. We are FAR too quick to criticize. It is terrible when people do not respect authority, and when public servants are falsely accused of corruption.

    I watch your attached video. I would ask if the argument he made that you are required to avoid danger, stay out of harms way, not interfere with legal law enforcement (the legality of all this is questionable - but that is another issue), etc. could not also have been applied to the resistance movement in WWII era Germany?

    I would just encourage you to look at the actual video, it is hard to believe you are in danger of being shot when you have already taken away the person’s gun. I would also encourage you look a little further into the positions and statements of this gentleman. All truth is God’s truth. A stopped clock is right twice a day. (Insert your favorite cliche.) Motive and character also matter.

    I have no desire to quibble, and say all of this with the utmost respect. I hope this post is not viewed as critical or disrespectful, because that truly is not my intent - just dialogue, and providing another perspective.

    Thank you for sharing your gifts with the world. God bless.

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    1. Hello friend — please never worry about putting forward a different view; that's how we move forward in understanding!

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    2. The chap whose video I added in to my blog post added some more info about Alex Pretti here, including some footage that has since emerged. This new video (about compassion) is not entirely about Alex Pretti, but I thought you might find it interesting.
      https://youtu.be/Udqut4lFGx0?si=qO9bMoPcku06yrXk

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    3. I tried, but was unable to view the new video link you posted. Thank you, though, for the follow up.

      I completely agree with the premise of your original post. I am by nature “left wing” but I have many times in the past seen things in left leaning media, that upon further investigation were not what they seemed. I know there is bias. I have, for my own mental health, largely left off news, and don’t do social media. I cannot, however, completely escape it.

      I live in the southern United States, and things are happening here as well. We do not make the news as much, because the actions are in “liberal” cities in “conservative” states, and the local and national media do not tend to cover it as much. Terrible things are happening in Memphis, Tennessee. Citizens of the USA, who are Hispanic, are being detained, small children wandering into school after officers have taken their parents, etc. Thankfully there are “conservative” Christians who normally would vote Republican, who are stepping up to help these people. Sadly, some still struggle to separate party loyalty from faith, which is disheartening, (and also a warning to me to check myself.)

      It may be that the tide is turning. Kevin Stitt, a very conservative governor in Oklahoma, another southern state, came out strongly against the high handed actions of ICE. His video was carried nationally, and is easy to find.

      I am not a trouble maker, but as the commenter from Minnesota said, people who are not seeing these things, and their impact on local communities, would find the things happening in this country hard to believe. Twenty years ago, you could not have convinced me that we would be in this situation.

      Thank you for bringing an open minded and charitable approach to all of this.

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    4. Oh! I wonder why that link didn't work? What a shame. I am coming more and more to the view that the problems we face cannot be corrected by a bloc vote, or an institutional mandate. We are each going to have to take responsibility. With that in mind, I find especially helpful what Brené Brown proposes, that compassion is enabled and strengthened by establishing and maintaining firm boundaries. I think that may be the key (whether civic or personal): to set definite and well-maintained boundaries in place, giving us the breathing space to exercise compassion appropriately in individual circumstances.
      The sweeping generalisations are our downfall every time!

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  3. Hello Pen
    This is Krista in Minnesota
    Thank you for the blog by Walter Hudson
    I actually live in what is called a first ring suburb of Minneapolis. The center of town is 10 minutes from my house. We feel all the tensions. People living outside our county do not believe it’s that bad because it doesn’t affect them. I am not on social media nor is my family members, choosing to keep our lives private as some are teachers and coaches and in the medical profession and law enforcement.
    Many years ago I was on a flight sitting next to a professor of Economics who was traveling to speak at Yale. We spoke of the U.S. and trying to grasp what is happening here as our country is so large. He said, if you want to know the truth you have to look at many angles and listen to other sources in and out of your country because all your news is propaganda. Propaganda?He said you are given true facts, but much is omitted, to lead you to think a certain way.
    Ever since then I see a story, a protest, an incident and I start asking questions…like who runs our Newspaper and what is their bias? Who is funding the protests? Who are the people protesting? What are they protesting? Are there any leaders encouraging them to actually do something positive to make change in those areas? In Minnesota, why aren’t people protesting the billions of dollars of fraud that should have gone to those in need? Why isn’t there a great protest to all our institutions of government that it takes thousands of dollars and endless lawyers for an illegal person to become legal so they always have to live in the shadows and have no rights?
    I am involved in these things…I do believe as a Christian you are called to make every effort to live in peace. I have learned to let stories take some time to unfold because the first things you hear are never quite accurate. I think the killing of any life is a tragedy. I support the tireless efforts of our dedicated professionals in our law enforcement and our government as they work every day to protect our communities and serve us in endless matters. I don’t agree with many decisions and laws and policies, but I am one person and we live in a country and community where we differ on many issues. I too am sad that we cannot disagree and work together anyway. Instead we are at war. I do not pretend that I could possibly understand what took place by one video. Especially when I am constantly being told what to think. Freedom of Speech exposes many things about us. Since Covid 19 we have constantly been told to be afraid. Fear sells. what happens to people when they are constantly afraid? So in my house, in my Town, in my city, in my state, and in my Country every day I pray for my leaders and the leaders of our churches. I pray for Gods Kingdom to Come and His will to be Done Here on Earth as it is in Heaven. I do not Trust in man. I pray and Trust God. It gives me peace in my heart and leads me to have ears to hear and a heart that listens. Pray for Minnesota as this past year has brought so much violence and death.
    Thank you

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    1. Thank you so much, Krista. This last year or so I have given a lot of time to listening to voices expressing different sides of issues that are hot topics in UK politics (and to a lesser extent, US). I have found it illuminating and at times unnerving to hear people with polar opposite views avowing that their ideas are right and the others are wrong! Listening has changed my own thinking radically, plus I think there had been a kind of redefinition over time, about what "Left" and "Right" in politics expresses and implies. I get the feeling that there are pullers of strings who benefit from keeping us busy arguing with one another!

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Welcome, friend! I'm always interested to read your comments.