Of all the animals of prey, man is the only sociable one.
Every one of us preys upon his neighbour, and yet we herd together.
The Beggar's Opera: John Gay

Saturday 17 October 2015

Holey argumentation, Batman!

The reappearance of Camila Batmanghelidjh in the public arena has, as ever, brought some wonderful turns of phrase such as Civil Society's suggested motto,'Never knowingly understood', or Quentin Letts' memorable comparison of Alan Yentob, seated at her side, to "a junior pudding waiter next to an urn of fruit salad".

Such verbal delights are merely the icing on a cake made from such rich and diverse ingredients as £150 shoes, brown envelopes of cash, tax payments being 'conceptualised' into thin air and 'abusive limericks' (for which, I should perhaps assure regular readers, your humble host was not responsible - despite the temptation).

Yentob was, his unsavoury attempts at shroud-waving notwithstanding, comprehensively upstaged by the sartorial migraine that is Batmanghelidjh in full battle dress - one wonders, now Kids' Company is no more, who has replaced the organisation's accountant as her dressmaker-in-chief - and quelled into a supporting role beside her truly astounding self-belief and looking-glass logic.

One can certainly sympathise with - and secretly envy - Paul Flynn's exasperated protest at the “spiel of psychobabble" and "verbal ectoplasm,” that constituted Batmanghelidjh's circumlocutory obfuscation over issues such as the notorious brown envelopes full of cash:
“It has turned into the notion that it was handed out willy-nilly,” she said. “It wasn’t. It was accounted for.”
All very reassuring - except that the issue was never whether the payments were recorded but rather why they were made at all; even the 'client' who described the scene during the handout on Fridays was happy to say she and the others signed for the cash:
'Then we would go to the shop and buy whatever we wanted with that money. It was weed heaven on a Friday, you could smell it coming down from the landings.'
Amid the Protean coils of Batmanhelidjh's convoluted rhetoric, however, this somehow became “The myth that we handed out cash in envelopes”. By this point, the committee were clearly struggling:
“But it’s not a myth, is it?” said Jenkin.
“No, it’s not a myth,” said Batmanghelidjh happily, and carried on, her point proved.
Somehow I can't help thinking of this...
"I don't know what you mean by 'glory'," Alice said.
Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. "Of course you don't - till I tell you. I meant 'there's a nice knock-down argument for you!'"
"But 'glory' doesn't mean 'a nice knock-down argument'," Alice objected.
When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean - neither more nor less."
While a fair number of Kids Company office staff seem to have been occupied - like the accountant - with the important business of stitching together the Empress' new clothes, some were clearly not so devoted; Batmanghelidjh's assertion at the enquiry that the money was for essentials is undermined by the assertion by a member of the accounts staff that
...money is not given according to need but, more often than not, because “people turn up and cuss and make a noise until they get their money”.
In any case, the way Humpty Dumpty - sorry, Batmanghelidjh -  herself viewed these payments is, perhaps, indicated by her comments in a BBC radio interview some months ago:
“Middle-class parents give their children pocket money. Why does it become a problem when it’s a poor child that’s being given money?”
Er... because it's money donated expressly to tackle the damaging effects of poverty and deprivation rather than for recreational spending? This, remember, is the woman who, by her own account, regularly gave 'clients' Christmas and birthday gifts of  'big bags of clothes' bought from John Lewis and Selfridges.
They get so excited when they open them, it always brings tears to my eyes.
Presumably she derived the same warm glow from giving out weekly 'pocket money', however it was spent. Like Batmanghelidjh herself, the monstrous cargo cult she created represents the supreme triumph of sentiment over reason - a dangerous thing indeed when applied to the serious business of raising and educating children,

The enquiry was never going to achieve much - beyond supplying material for facetious bloggers - when it depended on getting straight information from Alan Yentob and Camila Batmanghelidjh; all we can hope is that the Great and the Good walk away from this with the determination never to be fooled again.

7 comments:

  1. the sartorial migraine that is Batmanghelidjh in full battle dress

    Just beautiful.

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  2. The reason why the frock is so big is that she has to hide Alan Yentob underneath it.

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  3. I'll echo James' comment.

    "Virtue signalling" is a phrase which seems to pop up these days. Whoever coined it has hit an important nail on the head.

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  4. Thanks, all. She certainly seems to be going out of her way to signal something - although I seem to recall from nature documentaries, such colouring is usually an indication to stay well clear.

    Demetrius, on the voluminous nature of her attire, it's highly likely that Quentin Letts was - consciously or unconsciously - alluding to the comment on an earlier 'Mail' article describing her as 'a cross between Demis Roussos and a fruit salad'. Personally, I'm half expecting, rather in the manner of a bad 1970s pantomime, a horde of children to burst out from under the skirts to perform some kind of 'street dance'.

    It's interesting to note that, should she wish to avoid the public gaze, all she would have to do is don the off-the-peg clothes she has so publicly eschewed, leave off the lipstick and change her glasses and no-one would ever recognize her again - at least as long as she kept her mouth shut.

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    Replies
    1. Oh, and this is surely an excellent opportunity to savour once more JuliaM's inspired description,
      "An angry Godzilla trapped in a chintz duvet".

      Sheer genius!

      Delete
  5. A bit late, I've only just read this and it was well worth waiting for :-)

    I assumed you typed Batmanghelidjh so many times, only through use of copy and paste?

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  6. Thanks, Bucko; good to hear from you again. The answer - and it's rather sad - is that, having written several posts about the woman, I no longer need to look up the spelling and muscle memory takes care of the typing.
    (Memo to self; 'Get a life!')

    Today's Sunday Times has another entry for the 'Best description of Batmanghelidjh' competition:'bonkers laundry basket' 'squawking like a possessed emu' (Camilla Long).

    Truly she is the gift that keep on giving.

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