There occasionally are incidents or alterations of
national procedures which whilst perhaps
insignificant in themselves are indicative of profound changes in what could
arguably be termed “our culture” defined as the ideas, customs, and
social behaviour of a particular people or society. In my lifetime I would suggest that some
examples of our culture were free university education, blue hardcover
passports and the discretion allowed to eg teachers or police officers to make
on the spot decisions without recourse to a higher authority because those
professionals had earned social and professional respect. At “street level” the advice of most parents to their children
if they found something of value on the
road was to hand it in at a police station. It was a given; a no brainer: a classic example of the
difference between a child well brought up and one with no moral
parameters. That simple concept more in
keeping with theory than practice served me and my contemporaries well. Only once did it actually happen to me and I recollect as a child taking what seemed a
very large pound note to the local police station where it probably ended up in
the sergeant`s back pocket. That could
not happen today. Many police stations
are refusing to accept lost property placing the onus on the finder to seek out
the loser.
Readers might consider this change in
procedure trivial and it is. But it is symptomatic of what changes in law,
policing, individual freedoms and justice are happening right under our
noses. Because individually these changes might emit little odour, collectively our noses should be overwhelmed by the smell. They aren`t; and to our detriment as a society our
collective culture has passed the point of no return. Where in most matters British was a term of
pride it is now just the description of an island off the north west coast of Europe.