Liz Truss’ lack of self-awareness really is staggering, isn’t it? While I haven’t come across anything I can link to, this morning I keep coming across posts on Facebook stating that she now plans to have some kind of grand ‘comeback’, and also that she’s now making all sorts of spurious predictions about Andy Burnham wrecking the economy. This is coming from the shortest-lived, most disastrous Prime Minister in UK history; someone with so little clue that she had to be kicked out within a month. If Truss had any idea of her actual standing and reputation, she would have crawled under a rock with embarrassment, never to return. Yet now she’s apparently giving speeches at far right conferences, strutting around on stage like some political great. The question is, should we find it appalling or hilarious?
More broadly however, I think we can glimpse within this a wider social phenomenon: people in general seem to be becoming less and less self aware. We seem to all have increasingly inflated ideas of our authority and importance; probably due to our increasingly online lives, we seem to all think that what we have to say has gravitas and ought to be listened to. I’m probably no exception, while being under no illusion that I’m just a cripple who likes to spout bollocks on his blog every day. Yet while I accept my opinions are largely heeded only by a few of my friends and family members, there seems to be a tendency to think that once you say something online, particularly on social media sites, it will be listened to. Perhaps this feeds one’s sense of personal importance, seemingly leading some people to assume they are experts or authorities on certain subjects, when in reality they have just made a few dubious Youtube videos on it.
Thus, as comic and cringeworthy as it may be, in Truss’ bravado we can read something wider: a growing egoism and arrogance; the dogged insistence that your personal opinions outrank all others, and any evidence to the contrary is just a personal slight to be ignored. We see exactly the same in Donald Trump: Truss seems to think that, despite it all, despite being little more than a laughing stock, she deserves to be revered as some kind of great politician. The problem is, as we become more and more personally opinionated, the bonds which bind society together start to fray.



