Tuesday, 23 June 2015
Allright for some
Campaigners are demanding an immediate review into the Royal families contribution to Government austerity measures. It seems the Queen will not face any cuts to Royal finances for at least another 2 years - despite an 11% increase in her income. In the 2 years since the Civil list was replaced by the Sovereign Grant, the Queens taxpayer funded income has shot up from £36.1 million to more than £40 mililon, which seems obscene to me, especially in today's uncertain economic climate. They are simply outdated and in serious need of reform.
Surely its time to auction of the crown jewels, give her homes to the homeless, as they line their pockets through strict nepotism and strategic alliances. The Royal family is more than just an international embarassment, it is a crime against the British public. We should give thanks to those who have earned it, than to those who were born to rule, simply because they have the right last name.
The rule one for the rich and another rule for everybody else, obviously springs to mind. The cost is not the only reason I would like to see the back of ther monarchy ( and I can assure you that is my wish) - I would want them gone, even if they were free. But this latest abuse of public money and their lack of concern for the taxpayer is a symptom of an institution that cannot be held into account.
It surely is absurd that we still have them in this modern age. They are not elected, just inheritors of a status that is so outdated. Maybe having a King or Queen reminds the people of the old days, when Britannia ruled the waves, along with much of the world's land mass. The reality today is rather different though, they simply serve little purpose, other than to perpetuate a divisive class system, at a time when Britain is the most unequal society it has been in Queenies 60 year reign. I for one hope their reign does not endure.
Is it not time they were served an eviction notice from Buckingham Palace and offered a council house in return. But mind you they would have to wait around 8 years for one to turn up, on the current waiting list from Westminster City Council.
Surely we must have sufficient grounds by now for pressing for the dissolution of the monarchy.Time for them to give their palaces and silver and gold back to the nation. I long for the day when instead of singing God save the Queen or King, we cry out loud Viva Republic.
https://republic.org.uk/
Sunday, 21 June 2015
After Austerity Demo - Time to Keep fighting
Went up from Wales yesterday to the Peoples Assembly Demo in London, one of the biggest I've attended for years. It saw as many as 250,000 people taking to the streets to protest against austerity.
Masses of Trade Union banners mingling with placards from the Peoples Assembly, the Green Party, a myriad of political groups, Anarchists, Autonomists, Quakers, Hari Krishnas, all religious faiths, Class War dancing in the streets, Hunt Sabs, CND, Stop the War, you name it, they were there, a broad church clamoring for change.
Amazing too to bump randomly bump into several people from various parts of the country, which was pretty amazing considering the amount of people.
Not once did I feel unsafe, people in masks did not bother me, the only time I felt uncomfortable was the sight of policemen in uniform, carrying out governmental orders, but that's another story.
The message of the day, was "This Far, No further" to the government and their cuts. The feeling I left with was one of solidarity, celebration, a largely peaceful affair, but nevertheless saw people managing to get their different messages out. Linking us all to the economic and political struggles coming ahead. As the government agrees £12 billion welfare cuts- hours after this brilliant swell of people, just adds insult to injury.
It is not the end. We cannot allow ourselves to be distracted by rich politicians, bleeting on about immigration or aspiration or EU referrendums. We must unite against a system that seeks to oppress us all. After this big demo, we keep faith, keep fighting, when you see this many people marching together, it does release a good feeling, however much some speeches, being a tad lackluste . As a movement, we will keep on fighting, gaining momentum, with each step.
Peter Tosh - Equal Rights
Everyone is crying out for peace, yes,
No one is crying out for justice,
Everyone is crying out for peace , yes,
No one is crying out for justice.
( Happy Solstice, blessed be, solidarity)
Friday, 19 June 2015
Fela Kuti - Sorrow Tears and Blood
Dedicated to victims of Charleston shooting
"We fear for the things we no see
We fear for the air around us
We fear to fight for freedom
We fear to fight for liberty
We fear to fight for justice
We fear to fight for happiness
We always get reason to fear
We no want die
We no want wound
them leave Sorrow,Tears and Blood "
No to Austerity : National Demonstration 20 June 2015
We have to say no to the lie of austerity. Say no to the £12 billion in benefit cuts the Tory's are planning. No to the 4.5 billion new cuts just announced. No to a Government that has no actual mandate to govern. No to a Government that only 25% of the population bothered to vote for.
We must loudly say no to the vicious cuts, that will hit public services hard, including education, transport and local government. Making it even harder for councils to deliver key services such as social care.The NHS under threat too, as are our libraries. Things that matter a lot to ordinary people across the land.
This combined with the attack on the workers and the poor, the marginalised and the disadvantaged. We cannot afford to sit back and wait for their savage plans to unfold. Cameron and co have shown to us their true intentions, their intent to go on a rampage with our lives. In July will deliver a budget with £12 billion of cuts to welfare hitting the most vulnerable the hardest.
We need to stop them in their tracks show them our resistance, our strong opposition. Counter their extreme ideology, as they threaten to take away our freedoms and privileges and economic futures.That is why I will be joining others and travelling up from West Wales, a attend a demonstration in the heart of London, the belly of the beast, on the doorstep of the very people who caused the crisis in the first place, the bankers and their friends in government. We will demand that the bankers and the elite should pay for this crisis and not the vast majority who had nothing to do with it. I will support all that release their justified anger, joining the growing mood of angry defiance to the capitalist system that is now emerging. We should not forget either the richest 1,000 people in this country who doubled their wealth during the last parliament. How much more will they gain in the new one.
What will we achieve, we will have loudly shown our opposition, stood in solidarity, find some strength as we build our resistance, as we try to keep Britain tidy and kick out the Tory's. Their lies can be combatted, they can be defeated
Wednesday, 17 June 2015
I Am ( a poem to mark refugee week 15-21 June)
I am everyman, I am every woman
every current, every breeze,
I am in exile, looking for home
I am universal, a citizen of the world,
I am no trespasser, I come in peace
I am the colour of rainbows,
I drift among a mass of people
seeking refuge, carried on storms,
I am a witness of a world of poverty and war
I was born into revolution, turmoil and strife,
in rubble to the sound of bullets and explosions
my neighbours are dead, my friends are lost,
my homes have been plundered, my wells emptied
I have escaped persecution and oppression,
I am in search of freedom and hope
but I am refused, and given no welcome,
I am vilified and abused, told to shut my mouth
I ride waves of persistence, move in many directions,
I am the blood and soil of humanity
I carry the kiss of different languages tonque,
I arrive with the weight of dignity
I have fled sleepless and anquished nights,
I am a world of belief and struggle
moving onwards with memory and survival,
my voice rings out on all continents
I am an endless river, releasing the flow of endurance,
I am tired, but will not be silenced or confined anymore
I am a dream that never ever fades.
Monday, 15 June 2015
Refugee Week; 15-21 June 2015; No one is illegal
It is refugee week here in the UK a week to celebrate the rich contribution refugees bring to the UK and promote a better understanding of why people seek sanctuary, sadly however, we are currently witnessing the worst crisis since World War 11.
One million refugees still desperately in need of resettlement, some sanctuary, safe harbour. Currently there are 4 million Syrian refugees struggling to survive in Turkey, Lebanon, Iraq and Egypt. More than 3 million refugees in Sub-Sahara Africa and only a small fraction being offered resettlement. Since 2013, 3,500 people have drowned trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea in 2014, 1,865 so far this year. People daily dying, due to drowning, starvation or dehydration.
World leaders are condemning millions of refugees to an unbearable existence and thousands to death by failing to provide essential humanitarian protection, because they pursue selfish political interests instead of showing some human compassion.
Amnesty International have published today a new briefing today in Beirut, ahead of World Refugee Day on June 20th
The Global Refugee Crisis; a conspiracy of neglect
https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/pol40/1796/2015/en/
Governments across the world have a duty to ensure people do not die trying to reach safety, after managing to escape, persecution, torture, oppression, poverty, etc. Our own Government has not yet joined the United Nations High Commission for Refugees - a resettlement programme, but has instead set up its own programme providing minimal assistance. Unlike Germany who have pledged to take 11,000 Syrian refugees as part of a UN initiative. Even much smaller countries with respect, like Sweden and Norway have agreed to take in a significant number, to Britain's shame.
We must continue to counter the element of persecution of migrants and refugees, who have been scapegoated for no fault of their own. That has been fuelled by the rise of the racist UKIP party.
On the 25th of June European leaders will have the chance to take decisive action to save lives and stop smugglers in their tracks by offering refugees another route to safety. We must resettle more people bringing them directly and safely to European Countries. Please act now and call on the Prime Minister David Cameron to protect refugees in the Mediterranean.
http://act.refugeecouncil.org.uk/lobby/medcrisis
It is essential that we offer a safe have for desperate refugees, offering them protection and dignity, lets steer away from the mindset of Fortress Europe. To be welcomed and accepted , to be treated with respect, no one is illegal, no one should be caged, imprisoned, quarantined, denied access, abused and vilified for simply seeking freedom. In these uncertain times, we must offer them hope, and a means of survival.We must end the detentions and deportations. Let us stand together against racism and for international solidarity with migrants and refugees the world over.
No one is lllegal, we are all human.
Sunday, 14 June 2015
Guy Debord's Society of the Spectacle
Guy Debord
In his fascinating book first published June in 1967 the Society of the Spectacle, Guy Debord leading figure of the French Situationist International argued that to succumbing to alienation caused by capitalism we have let our lives become colonised by an immersive experience.
This spectacle has replaced social interaction and human needs. While this is superficially satisfying it makes us isolated and lonely individuals.It is still one of the greatest theoretical examinations of our social-cultural conditions describing in pinpoint accuracy the dreadful corporate globalization currently sweeping the planet.The spectacle accompanies us throughout our lives, via News Propaganda, advertising, enertainment and yes social media, presenting a continuous stream of imagery, projecting a constant justification for how our society and culture is formulated.
The text https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/guy-debord-the-society-of-the-spectacle.pdf?fbclid=IwAR1r_mORBe5b6eH__t7_A8iSz9ppVP2IwVVcmiVuTrqulmA5SZAwDlvSH6Q
was a primary influence not only on the near-revolution of May 1968 in Paris, but also on the ethos of London's underground press and certain aspects of punk ideology. The SI developed out of an earlier Left Bank twitch of avante garde politics, carring out programs of provocation, graffit and antiparty revolutionary outrage. The Situationists were concerned to articulate a 'theory of moments,' propogating ideas of pleasure and depicting the personal as intrinsically political (' boredom is always counterrevolutionary ' sneered one of their mottoes. Debord dissolved the SI ( proclaiming its victory over history') in 1972, their impact has been assured. Again we need t break with conventions, break out of our desolate paradigms, and be free.Viva the Situationists.
Sadly in 1994 aged 67, in the isolated village of Champot high in the Auvergne, Guy Debord shot himself with a single bullet to the heart.
Below Guy Debords 1967 text is remade into a contemporary context and turned into a mind-bending short film,with contributions from Marshall Mc Luhan and John Berger, made bt Aska with sound by Pippin Kenworthy.
Sadly in 1994 aged 67, in the isolated village of Champot high in the Auvergne, Guy Debord shot himself with a single bullet to the heart.
Below Guy Debords 1967 text is remade into a contemporary context and turned into a mind-bending short film,with contributions from Marshall Mc Luhan and John Berger, made bt Aska with sound by Pippin Kenworthy.
Friday, 12 June 2015
Ornette Coleman Jazz Legend R.I.P ( 9/3/30 -11/6/15)
Unfortunately blog playing up at moment, again, can no longer upload certain stuff here, in the libray, hey hot despite this must mention the passing of Ornette Coleman, legendary self-taught saxophone player who bought to the jazz world his unconventional 'free jazz, becoming known as an avant garde genius, sadly died yesterday morning in New York aged 85.
He began playing alto sax at age 14, partucularly influenced by Charlie Parker. In the late 1950's and early 1960's he became a central figure in the downtown avant garde scene. A friend of poets and musicians alike.
Mr Coleman widened the options in jazz and helped change its direction. He pioneered and presented a style that is not for some ears accessible, but I loved most of his body of work. Hauntingly beautiful, raw and tender. He symbolisedf the outsider American spirit as effectively as any artist of the last century. His bold and exciting music has had a huge impact on me and the shape of jazz to come.Truly amazing inspirational character, thank you Ornette. R.I.P
For Ornette
A plastic saxophone,
releases free tonal notes,
passionately in whirlwinds of intensity,
simple melodies of improvisation,
breathes of illumination.
compositions leftfield,
blowing against tradition,
otherworldly and gentle,
hauntingly beautiful,
refusing to be sensible,
keeps on soaring,
long after exit time.
thank you ornette,
for your musical gift.,
your legacy, sublime,
it will stay in place,
harmolodics will keep on talking,
the sound of imagination,
always free.
Thursday, 11 June 2015
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