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Lawless bubble


Guest tommmy

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Us Glasto goers appear to get by, for a few days a year, without the constraints of modern society. We overstep moral, social and legal boundaries without causing anyone any harm. One big lovefest of peace and harmony even if we are drunk, high, naked, gay, straight, cross dressers or Welsh. If only everyone in the real world could show this tolerance towards their fellow Man.

Edited by tommmy
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...And Glastonbury used to be even more like this, before the fence, with the travellers, and blaggers, dealers, and unofficial raves.

It's the thing I love most about Glasto - stepping outside of some of the constraints of society, testing both the boundaries of social group dynamics and the boundaries of your own personality. It's almost like a feeling of relief to be able to do this, a releasing of burden.

But I am also aware that it is a temporary laboratory. We call it a little town, but Glastonbury is actually a party, and none of it's (social) infrastructure could last beyond the few days it runs.

Imagine if they were to seal the walls and we were stuck there forever. Putting side any practical concerns (food supply, etc.), how long would it take before the Glastonbury spirit faded? It would be Hells Angels at Altamont within about a day and a half.

Having said all that, like Strummer said Glastonbury is about inspiration. I've truly learned many things about myself, society, and even the interaction between small groups of people in the relatively few days I've spent there. I would very much love to live in a world that had more of the Glastonbury spirit in it.

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It is the result of it's constituent parts and, as you say, as a result of the clear expectation of it being temporary everyone behaves in a particular way that, were the gates closed from the outside, would rapidly change.

Each year it is different, as the audience changes and trends of behaviour are occuring, sometimes noticably (2009 was markedly different in character to 2010) and sometimes more subtly (I'm sure you could make a nice graph showing the number of whippit containers collected on site each year as an example).

It mostly works because everyone there wants it to, WE are the festival and it is what we make of it, sadly in 'the real world' there is no such common goal that everyone agrees on (at glastonbury it is "have a great time") and so competing desires and aspirations among us all lead to the dischordant, directionless squabble that is western society.

What I don't understand, however, is how Tommmy has started a thread that doesn't have some sort of punchline along the lines of "and then I shoved it up the wrong 'un"

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It's the self governance that I like and the fact it works. The law is too black and white, for instance, an 18 year old can quite legally drink enough to kill himself whilst a 17 year old can't have a couple of pints on a Sunday afternoon without breaking the law.

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It's the self governance that I like and the fact it works. The law is too black and white, for instance, an 18 year old can quite legally drink enough to kill himself whilst a 17 year old can't have a couple of pints on a Sunday afternoon without breaking the law.

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Us Glasto goers appear to get by, for a few days a year, without the constraints of modern society. We overstep moral, social and legal boundaries without causing anyone any harm. One big lovefest of peace and harmony even if we are drunk, high, naked, gay, straight, cross dressers or Welsh. If only everyone in the real world could show this tolerance towards their fellow Man.

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Much as it's a nice thought, not sure I agree really.

You are expected to conform to the society you are in - a different society, but one with it's own rules still.

See plenty of 'intolerance' to what others don't feel conforms to their view of the Glastonbury society.

The police busting people for all sorts of things suggests that there's certainly 'law' in the usual sense too.

Freedom only exists when you you WANT to conform to the rules :).

If you want a bit more REAL freedom, try Sunday night at Reading a couple of years ago.

In reality 98% of people weren't harming others, but were still doing what they hell they wanted.

Edited by geebus
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I'm not suggesting that it would be a good idea to do away with legal boundaries in the real world. After all the forbidden fruit wouldn't taste so sweet if it was not forbidden.

Edited by tommmy
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