It seems there is something called the Independent Commission on Community and Cohesion, co-chaired by the former Conservative minister Sajid Javid and the former Labour MP and policy chief Jon Cruddas, a sort of cross party thing. And it has has been looking at what it means to belong and the kind of country they want to live in.
James Graham, who wrote the play Dear England about Gareth Southgate’s time managing the England men’s team, said this:
“We all know it. We all feel it in our hearts that the social bonds and the things that connect us, or traditionally have connected us, are fraying and breaking. That’s been going on for a very long time. It’s political, but it’s also social, cultural and emotional.”
“There’s no high street, the collapse of town centres and actual places to gather and be together as a community. But it goes beyond place as well,” he said.
“The rhythm of our lives has changed. We are lonelier, more isolated and more alienated. That’s true of older people, but, upsettingly, true for young people too. They’re the loneliest generation we’ve ever had. How can that be when we have all these ways to connect us?”
All of which is probably true to some extent. It has taken quite some time for town centres to become anything like “normal’, normal meaning pre-Covid. Granddaughter Number Two and Grandson Number One both had their later school days disrupted by the Covid lockdown, she at sixth form stage, he at GCSE stage. Their social life became largely family and some online friend contact. Both of them now work mostly from home, with occasional obligatory “office days”. Some of the normal structures for making friends and establishing relationships through the workplace have disappeared.
Granddaughter Number Two did go away to university to study and made some friends there but Grandson Number One went straight from sixth-form studies to work. For some time we worried about his social life - largely nonexistent - but he seems to be bouncing back. There is even a girlfriend on the scene now, although nobody in the family knows how he met her. We suspect online dating!
We love in strange times.
I was born and grew up in Southport. Consequently every so often Facebook makes a connection and shows me something related to that seaside town. A couple of days ago someone called Hannah Baldwin-Nugent posted this on the Southport Facebook page:
“Walked out to the wreck of the SS Chrysopolis today! Must have been an exceptionally low tide as neither me nor my dad have ever seen it before!”
Now, I had never heard of the SS Chryspolis. Surely my father would have told us about it but apparently not. So I looked on the internet and found this:
“The SS Chrysopolis ran aground on the Spencers Bank in fog on 14 February 1918. She was on a voyage from Genoa to Liverpool with a cargo of copper ore. During attempts to refloat her using two tugs, her back was broken and she became a total loss. A gale sprang up, resulting in her 38 crew and a further four salvors being rescued by the Southport lifeboat.”
And there the wreck seemingly remains. How odd!
Here’s a story of resistance or protest:
“Lebanese 8-year-old chess player Loren Abdel Samad refused to play against Israeli opponents during the World Youth Chess Championship in Batumi, a decision that led to automatic losses and affected her final ranking.
According to her family, the move was intentional despite the consequences, with her father saying she was fully aware of the outcome but maintained a firm personal stance shaped by her awareness of Israel’s “destruction of homes and the targeting of children.””
Eight years old with a sense of right and wrong,
And here’s something about Mr Trump.
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!










