Clive James on Silly Money
Clive James is one of my favourite writers. When I was 13 years old I wanted to write like him. I still do. Deeply funny and very, very well-read. Cambridge educated, he wears his omniverous intellect lightly, rather like David Mitchell.
He’s Australian, but like fellow brainy Aussie Germaine Greer, he left his native land early to forge a formidable reputation in the UK. Occasionally Clive James does a series of talks for Point of View on Radio 4. (A 10-minute podcast each week – well worth subscribing to!)
He nails his topic just about every time: last week he delivered one of the best atheist-agnostic descriptions of the continuing importance of Jesus I’ve ever heard.
This week, he takes on the credit crisis, and makes one very serious point – why the heck do we need all this money anyway? What WAS Bernard Madoff (already a wealthy man) actually going to DO with 50 billion dollars?
James makes one prediction for 2009 – having lots and lots of money is going to look very silly.
“We’ve reached a turning point. A madness has gone out of fashion: the madness of behaving as if only too much can be enough. There will always be another madness, but not that one. From now on a man will have to be as dumb as an petrodollar potentate to think that anyone will respect him for sitting on a gold toilet in a private jumbo jet.”