That’s a lot of words to say: “things are still working in spite of a decade and a half of active destruction, thanks to the people getting crushed putting all their effort in to resist it completely failing”
I’m being flippant, but this reads pretty tone deaf to me, especially from the guardian
Literally only came to the comments here to say this. I almost expected there to be a recipe for some dish by the amount of waffle.
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Hmm, I guess I agree with your critique. But still, the main reason I wanted to post this is because it counters the otherwise black and white perception of the state of things that reading the news has lead me to. IMHO you are overthinking a bit when you see techno optimism as their metric of progress, although this is something that spending time on Lemmy has also made me do.
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a person comfortably cushioned from even some of the milder effects of brutal govt policy.
Ahh I understand what you meant now
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Fifteen years ago I moved to France with my husband and a burgeoning baby bump, lured by low property prices and the chance to quit our jobs as teachers.
After years of cuts, austerity and Covid, I’d begun to worry the place I’d be returning to might feel as alien as France did when I’d first arrived, with its unfathomable bureaucracy, shops that closed on Mondays and habitual lunchtime (and sometimes morning) drinking.
I was concerned about poor public services (with councils in England absorbing a 27% real-terms cut in core spending power since 2010, who wouldn’t be?).
I’ve noticed worn flooring and thoroughly chipped paintwork across the buildings in my children’s schools, and can’t help but worry about the effect this must have on pupil and staff morale.
Having arrived at my local surgery to register seven new patients, I was worried I might be given short shrift – the last thing overworked staff need is an increase in demand.
Using an app for medical care (unheard of back in 2009, when nobody I knew yet owned a smartphone – and still not routinely used in France), I’ve had to ask for clarification several times on how to get a repeat prescription.
The original article contains 1,016 words, the summary contains 203 words. Saved 80%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!