It
is a peculiar feature of industrial society that the old are treated
as socially redundant and Thanks for the Memory, this week’s
Brass Tacks (8.10 BBC2), examines the implications. For years pensioners
have been fobbed-off by governments who have dispensed formal handouts
like charity. But, because pensioners, by definition, are no longer
part of the work-force they have little or no collective clout.
Recently there have develope3d pockets of organised political action
among the over-60s, but hey have come to believe their best hope
lies in the TUC whose annual
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conference
this week will include a debate on early retirement with fixed benefits.
Brass Tacks editor Roger Laughton feels that
though many people sympathise with pensioners, the over-60s are
powerless: “They feel that their skills are discarded, but
who can they argue with?” A group of London pensioners are
interviewed about their life, attitudes, and expectations for old
age; in the studio Maggie Kuhn, activist, leader of the American
over-60s movement, the Grey Panthers, explains why she believes
in a militant approach to the rights of the elderly.
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