Pat Onions has submitted an e-petion to the government website. Pat who is blind, is also a carer. .
There is now just less than month before this petition expires on 1st November, it has been signed by 50,000 but urgently needs to get another 50,000 by the end of the month - we have to keep pushing, this government needs to be told the depth of feeling in this country that is against their punitive policies. Every voice counts. If they still do not listen we must do everything that is available to keep up opposition to their deeply flawed, policies. Together we can win.
Pat's petition calls on Parliament to:
"Stop and review the cuts to benefits and services which are falling disproportionately on disabled people, their carers and families"
it can be signed here
http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/20968
And after you have signed keep sharing the petition as wide and as far as possible, because we still have a long way to go.Up and down the country it is also noticed that the Work Capability Assessments are simply failing the most vulnerable sections of our community and that Atos the company undertaking these tests are simply not fit for purpose.
Hopefully the 100,000 target will be reached, and perhaps their will be some kind of debate in Parliament. If we get enough signatures at least we can shame them.
And when they carry on not listening, we carry on together too, in solidarity, resisting them every inch of the way. We will not be silenced.
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
Sunday, 30 September 2012
Thomas de Quincey (15/8/1785 -8/12-1859) - On William Wordsworth (7/4/1770-23/4/1850)
I've written about Mr De Quincey before which you can find below at following link.
teifidancer: THOMAS DE QUINCEY and his phantasmagoric dreams. In 1807 he went to visit the lake District, where he became friends with the poet William Wordsworth. In 1809 he settled in Grasmere, at Dove House which had previously been Mr Wordsworth's home. He was to stay there for ten years. Thomas had long been an admirer of Williams work, and for a while their was a lot of mutual respect, becoming friends with Wordsworth's sister Dorothy and a number of his acquaintances who became known as the lake poets, including Coleridge and Robert Southey. However over the years there was to be a gradual falling out, over some real or imagined state. It has been mentioned that de Quincey thought that Wordsworth had been ungenerous towards him, though he had a tendency to think that, of a lot of people. De Quincey's head at the time had more than just a claustophobic edge to it , by this time he was using opium daily to relieve the products of social restraints that he felt, and was often to be found wandering in much a delirious state, delivering a number of public spats, that were to become the stuff of legend.Later he wrote this essay,in which he achieved some sort of public revenge by drawing this pen picture of his ex-friend on a Nature Ramble. It has more than a bite to it.
William Wordsworth
But the worst part of Wordsworth's person was the bust: there was a narrowness and a droop about the shoulders which became striking, and had an effect of meanness which brought into close juxtasposition with a figure of a most statuesque order. Once on a summer morning, waliking in the vale of Langdale with Wordsworth, his sister,and Mr J - a native Westmoreland clergyman, I remember that Miss Wordsworth was positively mortified the peculiar illustration which settled upon this defective conformation. Mr J -, a fine towering figure, six feet high, massy and columner in his proportions, happened to be walking, a little in advance, with Wordsworth and myself being in the rear; and from the nature of the conversation which then prevailed in our front rank, something or other about money, deviceses, buying and selling, we of the rear-guard thought it requisite to preserve this arrangement for a space of three miles or more; during which time, at intervals, MissW - ould exclaim, in a tone of vexation, 'Is it possible? can that be William? How mean he looks!'' and could not conceal a mortification that seemed really painful, until I, for my part, could not forbear laughing outright at the serious interest which she carried into this trifle. She was however, right as regarded the mere visual judgement.
Wordsworth's figure, with all its defects, was brought into powerful relief by one which had been cast in a more square and massy mould; and in such a case it impressed a spectator with a sense of absolute meaness, more especially when viewed from behind, and not counteracted by his counterance; and yet Wordsworth was of a good height, just five feet ten, and not a slender man; on the contrary, by the side of Southey his limbs looked thick, almost in a disproportionate degree.
But the total effect of Wordsworth's person was always the worst in a state of motion; for, according to the remark I have heard from country people, 'he walked like a cade' - a cade being some sort of insect which advances by an oblique motion ( 'a cade'was, in fact, the country word for a tottering, new-born lamb: perhaps slightly preferable from Wordswort's point of view to an ant). This was not always perceptible, and in part depended (I believe) upon the position of the arms; when either of these happened (as was very customary) to be inserted into the unbuttoned waistcoat, his walk had a wry or twisted appearance only - for I have known it, by slow degrees, gradually to edge off his companion from the middle of the side of the highroad.
From
Recollections of the Lakes and the Lake Poets
- Thomas de Quincey 1840.
Saturday, 29 September 2012
Punishment in 18th Century Wales - John Torbuck
'Some of the most obstinate criminals are punished by Suspension, but not by the Neck, as here in England, but by the Wrists. Thumb-rop'd together with String of Hay, and so fasten'd to a Peg; well! this is but the Beginning... the Sting will follow: The offending Taphy thus dangling in the Air, the Beadle approaches with a stick im'd with a feather at one End, and tickles his Testiclesp, these softer Titillation engender some vibrations of the Body, and nimble Friskings, which are shrewdly chasti'd by a Cat-of-nine-tails.
For several crimes they have various Punishments. That grand Enormity of Breaking-wind is chastised there as it is in England, that is, the Hand of Magistracy doth usually inflict a pretty lusty Cobbling, that is, for every Report of Loss of an Hair, though some that have been much addicted to the Infirmity, and therefore have been very guilty of a Stink, have endured the Cruelty of tormenting Fairies, that is, have been pinch'd into Manners, and a better Smell.
From A collection of Welsh Travels and Memoirs of Wales
1738
Ah, the whif of what passed as justice rattling down the years......
For several crimes they have various Punishments. That grand Enormity of Breaking-wind is chastised there as it is in England, that is, the Hand of Magistracy doth usually inflict a pretty lusty Cobbling, that is, for every Report of Loss of an Hair, though some that have been much addicted to the Infirmity, and therefore have been very guilty of a Stink, have endured the Cruelty of tormenting Fairies, that is, have been pinch'd into Manners, and a better Smell.
1738
Ah, the whif of what passed as justice rattling down the years......
Tuesday, 25 September 2012
EVICT ERIC PICKLES
The Department for Communities and Local Government were yesterday given 28 days notice to vacate their central London premises and mounting criticism of their recent behaviour. Travellors, Gypsies, Roma and Supporters behind the move stated " persistant racially aggravated persecution... harrassment, alarm and distress amounting to anti-social behaviour and gross misconduct."
More details here
http://travellersolidarity.org/
Fight for Sites: Evict the Department for Communities and Local Government
More details here
http://travellersolidarity.org/
Fight for Sites: Evict the Department for Communities and Local Government
Monday, 24 September 2012
Palestinian child prisoners 'abused'.
Rights groups say youths arrested by Israeli forces face prospect of beatings and rights violations.
Hundreds of Palestinian children are arrested by the Israeli military every tear for throwing stones at occupying forces.
They are tried in Israeli military courts and human rights organisations say the trial lacks due progress and are against international law.
When asked about the allegations, an Israeli foreign ministry spokesperson told Al Jazeera that the rights organisation that documented the abuses was "not a credible organisation", and said that no such evidence had been shared with the Israeli authorities.
Al Jazeera's Charles Stafford reports from Abu Dis, in the occupied West Bank.
Source: Al Jazeera
Sunday, 23 September 2012
Adrian Mitchell (24/10/32 -20/12/08) - Guns
a sense of proportion.....
They seem to have all the guns,
Most of the guns in Britain are
British/American government property
Police property
Or the property of gentry-gangsters
Who are British/American government property.
Nobody I love has a gun. Not in Britain.
The rich are rich because they fuck people about.
They call it the Quality of Leadership
And they have special school-machines producing
Leaders to fuck people about.
People with guns
Tend to fuck other people about.
The people they tend to fuck about
Are people who don't have guns.
None of my friends has a machine-gun ready,
Let alone a tank.
A few yards ahead of us, a row of truncheons.
Behind the truncheons, rifles,
Behind the rifles, grenades,
Behind the grenades, machine-guns,
Behind the machine-guns, tanks,
Behind the tanks, bombs,
And behind the bombs - the rich.
The rich are as stupid as guns,
They will be killed with their own guns.
In every capital
The fucked about of the world are taking arms.
The people of the world
We are going to take it.
Saturday, 22 September 2012
Artscape: Poets of Protest - Manal Al Sheikh: Fire Won't Eat Me Up
Poet, editor and activist Manal Al Sheik, says it is now lethal for her to be a writer in her home town of Ninewh, Iraq. We follow her as she prepares a new poem for a public reading in Norwegian.
Friday, 21 September 2012
Happy Autumn Equinox
Every day, the season air humming, for some can be numbing, walking on the edge..... beyond the weight, voices talk, voices share, navigate between imperfect intervals and mornings rush..... towards a mutlitude of possibility. Shadows become a thousand words, and the roaring continues , the wind is never silent.
Happy Autumn Equinox
heddwch/peace.....
Thursday, 20 September 2012
Nick Clegg Says Sorry - The Remix
I like it when people say sorry, it can't be easy.But sometimes it just happens to come a little too bloody late. Is this for the country or is it for his party's conference this weekend. His original apology did not sound very heartfelt either, I prefer this version
Not sure if it will change anybodies opinions about him though. Don't think he's goin to win any popularity contests any time soon, either. ****R
Wednesday, 19 September 2012
Kelvin MacKenzie doorstepped over Hillsborough
Former Sun editor Kelvin MacKenzie declines to answer question from Channel 4 news reporter Alex Thomson on his record over the papers coverage of Hillsborough football tragedy.
This video has now been watched on youtube over 64,000 times.
Here's a response to it.
Kelvin Mackenzie Dorstopped Remixed
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