Saturday, 14 December 2019

Marc Almond feat. Ian Anderson - Lord of Misrule


Marc Almond's 24th album titled "Chaos and a Dancing Star" will be released on January 31, 2020.
 The album was made in collaboration with producer, songwriter and pianist Chris Braide, who also worked on The Velvet Trail. An Ivor Novello winner and a Grammy nominee, Braide’s many high profile credits include work with artists such as Sia, Lana Del Rey and Halsey. The duo started writing for the album three years ago, their initial plan for a prog rock album evolving into something leaning more towards pop melodies.
 Chaos And A Dancing Star’ provides another twist in the unorthodox artistry that’s become a hallmark of Almond’s career. The title plays on a quote from Nietzsche’s ‘Thus Spoke Zarathustra’: “One must still have chaos in oneself to be able to give birth to a dancing star.”
On putting together the new album, Almond said: “I wanted to write romantic apocalyptic love songs and set the songs in the fatal end of days settings with a touch of mystic paganism yet hopelessness. It reflects the out-of-kilter world in which we find ourselves living today… Maybe it is the end of days for all of us, and perhaps this is something we should acknowledge."  
The first music to be shared from the project is ‘Lord of Misrule’, here the iconic 62 year old pop star's fervent voice magically  powers a dramatical collision of apocalyptic and festive imagery, with soulful vocal harmonies, flute courtesy of Jethro Tull legend Ian Anderson. Marc  setting his eye on the pulse of political and emotional cross roads that we are all currently witnessing. 
Almond has long been  a summation of everything grandiose, subversive and sexy there’s ever been about popular culture- and in an increasingly beige, identikit world, we still need him, but don't let the Lord Misrule in,  continue to refuse, oh fucking too late, looks like  this nations already welcomed him with open arms.  .

Lord of Misrule

Lord of Misrule Please
come on in and sit you down
to partake of the feast
I count you all the friends I have
the ones I like the least
I'll shelter you from darkness
as it clouds over the earth
for the world is in a turmoil
and life has lost it's worth
Black will be your Christmas
and sad tidings to you all
I'll put my gifts under the tree
wait for the ash to fall
I'll give you guns and bombs
and all my military plans
I'll give you my machines
and a list of my demands
The Lord of Misrule
Lord at the Feast of Fools
not mischievous, but cruel
Lord of Misrule
I'll bring you to your knees before festivities begin
I may be a Lord, but please don't let me in
I'll be the last one laughing at the ending of the world
I'll point my finger at you and say you got what you deserved
take pleasure in your misery
I'll revel in your shame
a little festive schadenfreude
and wicked party games
so take your chances,
dear I'll let you covet every day
betray your friends and break their hearts
come on, and make a play
they'd only do the same to you
so don't regret a thing
bring your deceits to the table
and let the feast begin!
The Lord of Misrule
Lord at the Feast of Fools
not mischievous, but cruel
Lord of Misrule
I'll bring you to your knees before festivities begin
I may be a Lord, but please don't let me in
so face the sun until the shadow falls behind you
cause I'm the lord and I will always find you
so face the sun until the shadow falls behind you
cause I'm the lord and I will always find you

Friday, 13 December 2019

Don't Give Up On Hope


The results are in and we’re looking at another five years of a  vicious right wing Conservative government. It's a very grim day, and devastating for many of us at this moment of time. Truly ironic considering it's Friday the 13th. We are all tired now and need to mourn, I don't know what will happen next. I despair for our futures  and the next generations to come, Whatever happens we must stay angry, keep on fighting, more so now than ever  as we face the Tories running amok, they will try and attack us on every front, we will all need to work together to resist what's coming next.
There are many lessons to learn, like  how was the electorate overcome by mass hypnosis by a rabid right wing Murdoch media, and the relentless bias unleashed by the B.B.C.  A strategy used time and time again, to mask  what's important and sensationalise trivia then keep on hammering it to dupe the masses. Rather than decipher integrity from deceit, people usually succumb to the latter because of widespread manipulation.  It has ruptured the very heart of British politics and perforated its soul. How could someone who has made so many cock ups and blatantly void of any integrity  not just get elected but gain an overwhelming majority.  Are people so immune to his paltry, deplorable antics, they just abandon all sense of logic and yield to his oafishness. Johnson’s central campaign promises were based on untruths. 88% of Conservative ads are misleading. We know from decades of speeches and writing that Johnson is an elitist, not a democrat.
 Yesterday, the Yorkshire Post published a scathing editorial demanding: “The people of this country must never again be asked to navigate a maelstrom of misinformation in order to decide who will govern them.” The political establishment have treated us with contempt. Instead of encouraging mass participation, powerful actors have tried to manipulate us in any way possible to secure the outcome they wanted. The billionaires are now firmly in control of government. Everything that the rest of us value is now on the table.
We do not necessarily have to be within political parties to fight back, there are other ways, but now is the time to stay awake, recharge our batteries. Do not  for a minute think the Tories have us defeated, this is what the system does, it sucks out your hope and energy, a system that everybody is beginning to realize is broken and cannot be fixed. We should be wary of media exaggeration of the scale of Tory success: the overall Tory vote only increased by 1.2 %. While it appears many Labour voters have switched to the Tories in Leave areas, many others will have simply abstained. Thousands of activists campaigned and millions of voters voted for a Labour manifesto offering a vision of hope; but this election has also exposed that many, many others are feeling a deep disillusionment with all forms of politics.  How can it be right that the winning party will have carte blanche to do what it likes with just over 40 % of the vote.Out of the total electorate more people did not  vote  for the winning Conservatives.  I will leave you to draw your own conclusions and to act/ organise accordingly.
As our leaders will continue to treat us as dirt, and want us to remain broken, together we will rise and in solidarity we will find our strength. We can rebuild, With resistance, triumph and compassion I have a strong belief our futures can  and must be changed for the better. Forwards and onwards we must go, with our roads and focus clear. All these things for now give me still some hope.
Yet this Christmas and the times ahead  hundreds  of thousands of people are still facing poverty and inequality, we are facing an attack on the Human Rights Act, increased surveillance of the whole population  and policing which targets minorities. The racist hostile environment and state harassment of anyone considered different will continue alongside the ongoing assault on our beloved NHS. Our very democracy under threat by our Government that wants to put itself above the law.
 It will be important to remember that the power of the Tories will not lie on stable grounds. There is an ever-growing demand for Scottish independence, an emerging movement for independence in Wales and a case for a united Ireland is ever stronger in the face of the disaster that is likely to unfold with a Tory Brexit. The Tory manifesto was painfully thin. Johnson has stood on a short-term platform of ‘getting Brexit done’, but he has not set out his plans to govern on a much wider set of issues. The climate emergency and the prospect of a global recession are terrible crises facing all of us, but Johnson has not attempted to articulate any kind of plan to address them.
Though many are currently in shock and despondent, when this wears off I truly believe there  will be an increase in movements to repair the damage and to promote awareness.Passionate voices  remain and will not go away quietly,  needed now more than ever, and they will collectively rise.  We must continue to hold our Government to account, in court, in Parliament, in our streets and communities, we must  keep fighting like our lives and our rights depend on it.
Over the next few years many others will wise up and regret their decision to vote Tory when it becomes obvious that what they voted for has not been delivered and when it sinks in that the "lovable  buffoon" that they voted for is a dangerous opportunist  with no sense of obligation to them.
Our movements have no limit, no borders and belong to all who wish to be part of it. This spring of hope is not easily diminished, so don't give up on it. As  the late singer  Phil Ochs once said  "In such ugly times the only true protest is beauty."
There are a thousand vital issues to campaign over – from global issues like climate, through national issues like the NHS, to issues local to particular communities or workplaces. As our country's future is being defined and marked by uncertainty, whatever people focus on, organising to build participation in collective action is the surest way to change lives, change minds – and change governments.Our fight for a better society and a more just equal world  must continue. Keep on holding on, stand up for one another, and cling on  to the lights that can sustain us in our ongoing struggles. 

From Despair to Hope

There's so much conditioning, making us hate
that we become our own enemies at the gate,
beams of reason disappearing before us
colors of hope melting in the earth,
politicians burying consciousness
join in the revel, play with the devil,
bitter and biting, silently gloating
releasing fathomless depths of despair,
punishing people for simply being ill
with policies of cruelty that actually kill,
the ghosts of Grenfell still haunting the land
yet they continue building walls to divide,
louder and louder, the wind is raging
the air not yet full of resignation,
strong, courageous and resilient
we can overcome the monsters,
gentler aspects of humanity will reveal
to not allow ourselves to be draped in pain,
hopelessness will only hang around, if we feed it
blazing embers of defiance burn brightly too,
we can be saved, greet  tomorrow's epiphany
the future unwritten, can cancel  negativity.

Thursday, 12 December 2019

Lowkey - Vote Corbyn


Today is Judgment Day, Remember get out and vote. Are we a shrivelled up, xenophobic, inbred little country with a population of serfs voting for sociopathic rulers or a grown up, inclusive, outward-looking multicultural happy society, developing fairness & fairness for all.
If you live in England, Wales or Scotland, you do not need to take anything with you if you are registered to vote – not even your poll card or ID.
Although you do not need your card to cast a vote, you will need to give the staff your name and address.
When you turn up at the station you then will be given a ballot paper where you select the parliamentary candidate to vote for.
Polling stations will open at 7am and close at 10pm on Thursday – this is the same across the UK, no matter your location.
There's a 15-hour window of opportunity to vote on polling day, which should give you ample time to get down to your polling station to cast your ballot. Hope  you seize the moment to vote for hope and a decent future and Bin Boris. 


Lowkey - Vote Corbyn, Lyrics

December 12th

Change the world

Sell the NHS thats what Boris wants
He doesn't even have to lie they just fob it off
They haven't got the honesty but they've got the bots
Policies that kill they're not telling you the proper cost
More corporate violence that's what Boris wants
Contracts for affairs, relationship was on and off
The robber boss won't even cover what your coffin costs
Policies that kill, we can't bring back what was lost
Theres murder in his murmuring, his churning grin's harmful
Interrogate in several ways a journalist can't do
A liar in the booth, a million examples
As trustworthy as the BBC is impartial
Another suicide note she folded it in her purse
To another assessment they told her she's fit to work
Death by a thousand cuts this system that isn't hers
Didn't receieve a bit of dignity she did deserve
Vote for the Nurses, Chagos, Rough sleepers
Vote against the Oligarch's, Fossil Fools, Gun dealers
Vote for the Musician's sickest songs you sing along
Vote for Yemeni children under biritsh bombs
Vote for the libraries, childcare, youth centres
Vote for the truth tellers, not the fake news sellers
Something is rising, it isn't your salary
The only thing rising is the infant mortality
A pig, and a racist admits that hes shameless
Vote Corbyn, sure thing, glitch in the matrix
Vote against this oven ready born to rule trump puppet
Can't spell Pinnocchio they think we're just the dumb public
Cuts to the services, conservatives control the news
Won't forget Grenfell, Its fire in the voting booth
A toff, and a sloth, nose full up of charlie
Vote for those that cleaned up after the Bullingdon parties and vote Corbyn!

Chuck the government Chuck Boris (Vote Corbyn!)
Chuck the government Chuck Boris (Vote Corbyn!)
Chuck the government Chuck Boris (Vote Corbyn!)
Chuck the government Chuck Boris (Vote Corbyn!)
Chuck the government Chuck Boris (Vote Corbyn!)
Chuck the government Chuck Boris (Vote Corbyn!)
Chuck the government Chuck Boris (Vote Corbyn!)
Chuck the government Chuck Boris (Vote Corbyn!)

 Now is not the time to mess around
There's killers in the Government just get them out
Now is not the time to mess around
There's killers in the Government just get them out
Now is not the time to mess around
There's killers in the Government just get them out
Now is not the time to mess around
There's killers in the Government just get them out
Now is not the time to mess around
There's killers in the Government just get them out
Now is not the time to mess around
There's killers in the Government just get them out
Now is not the time to mess around
There's killers in the Government just get them out
Now is not the time to mess around
There's killers in the Government just get them out


Wednesday, 11 December 2019

December 12, 2019 : Kick out Boris Johnson and the Conservative Party


Our  cowardly Prime Minister Boris Johnson hid in a fridge this morning to avoid hard hitting political questions from ITV'S Good Morning , this following  the news that revealed what a callous bastard he really is after he took an ITV reporters phone and put it in his pocket after being asked to look at the photo of a sick boy sleeping in a hospital floor, and after the immediate move by the Tories and their media supporters to distract people from this story and to attempt to rubbish it as fake news.
Johnson has been called by Chris Patten , medacious and incompetent, Mathew Parris launched a scathing attack on him, Michael Heseltine and John Major have also spoken out against him.
To the British public  he  portrays himself  as a Bertie Wooster character, his hair is a mess, he falls into ponds,  designed to make people feel sympathy towards him, because of  an intimation of vulnerability and a sense that  he is fundamentally unserious. But underneath the  bumbling facade, there is an undeniable ruthlessness and  has been exposed to be a serial liar.
Lets not forget how many times he has been sacked because of this,  sacked from his first job - as a newspaper journalist at The [London] Times. Then also sacked from his second job - as a newspaper journalist at the Daily Telegraph . Then lied his way into a job, telling the publisher of the Spectator that he would not pursue a political career. He got the job as the Editor. When he broke that promise, the publisher called him "ineffably duplicitous".
Alexander B De Spaffel Johnson was then sacked from two more jobs for lying - vice-chair of the Conservative party, and shadow arts minister. He had lied to the party Leader, Michael Howard, about an affair he was having. He had lasted 6 months as a shadow minister, before being sacked for lying.
He lied about the action he would take if construction began on a third runway at Heathrow, having promised to lie down in front of the bulldozers. He made sure to be out of the country that day, instead.
He offered help to someone who wanted a journalist beaten up. Then denied he had done it. (The tape recording of his offer of help is widely available. So is the Eddie Mair interview in which he denies it).He broke at least three of his key manifesto promises when he was London Mayor. And he broke his promise not to stand as an MP while he was still Mayor.
He co-signed a letter stating that “the only way to avoid having common borders with Turkey is to vote Leave” then lied about signing it. He lied about £350 million a week going to the EU. He lied about using that (not actually real) money on the NHS instead.
He lied about EU rules affecting a Manx kipper factory. The Isle of Man is not in the EU. And the rules he said were EU rules were actually UK rules.
He promised to die in a ditch rather than request a Brexit extension. He requested the extension. Ditches throughout the land remain untroubled by his presence, alive or otherwise.
The Daily Telegraph has recently printed at least one, possibly several, apologies for lies he told in stories he wrote there this year.
He looked many members of his Parliamentary party in the eye and assured them that, no matter what, he would leave the EU on the 31st of October, so they would endorse him for the party.In short, he lies easily, fluidly, frequently and habitually.
With renewed focus on him, additionally  , a raft of offensive insults deployed by Johnson have come to light again this general  election.
The decades of remarks, uttered in public office, scribbled in columns and penned in novels have returned to dog the Prime Minister, who has been hesitant to apologise when pressed by journalists.
The comments that have come up during the election campaign include remarks accused of displaying of racism, misogyny, antisemitism, Islamophobia, classism and homophobia, written when he was aged 30 and beyond.
Sadiq Khan says Boris Johnson’s record on racism is far worse than Jeremy Corbyn’s handling of antisemitism in the Labour party.Speaking on LBC, the Labour mayor of London said Johnson had put racist and Islamophobic comments on the record 'and been paid for it'.
 Writing in the Telegraph in 2002, Johnson referred to a visit to Africa by the then prime minister Tony Blair.
"What a relief it must be for Blair to get out of England. It is said that the Queen has come to love the Commonwealth, partly because it supplies her with regular cheering crowds of flag-waving piccaninnies,"  a racist term for African children.
Confronted about the comment during his first campaign for London Mayor, Johnson claimed that the comments had been "taken out of context."
Boris Johnson was last year reported to the Equalities Commission after comparing Muslim women who wear burqas to "letter boxes" and bank robbers.
The former foreign secretary wrote in an article for the Telegraph that "it is absolutely ridiculous that people should choose to go around looking like letter boxes," adding that any female student who appeared at school or in a lecture "looking like a bank robber" should be asked to remove it.
Johnson also  has a notoriously bad track record when it comes to how he views women and women’s rights, throughout his multiple careers. As a journalist in the 1990s and 2000s, he made numerous sexist gaffes. Lamenting the reaction to Princess Diana’s death in 1997, he wrote that "we live in an age where feminism is a fact, where giving vent to emotion in public wins votes". In the same decade, his female colleagues publicly complained about Johnson pinning a glamour calendar featuring nude and sexualised photographs of women, even after receiving multiple complaints that it was making them uncomfortable. In a 2005 farewell piece marking his exit as the Spectator’s editor, he advised his successor to "just pat [their female publisher] on the bottom and send her on her way".
This kind of behaviour continued in his various political roles. During his 2005 campaign to become a Conservative MP he stated that "voting Tory will cause your wife to have bigger breasts". He also expressed how "magnificent" it was to watch "semi-naked women playing beach volleyball … glistening like wet otters" during the 2012 London Olympics which he hosted as then-Mayor.
Such sexist behaviour is also evident in his voting patterns. As MP, he has continuously abstained from voting on any sort of abortion legislation and, in 2015, comprised one of the 305 MPs who opposed cutting the tampon tax (where tampons are legally considered and taxed as a ‘luxury’ and an ‘unnecessary’ product) which caused the amendment bill to be rejected.
 Then there are his  homophobic utterances,in a 2001 article in the Spectator. for example, Johnson condemned a British legislator for voting in favor of “Labour’s appalling agenda, encouraging the teaching of homosexuality in schools.” In the late ‘90s, he also reportedly referred to gay people as "tank-topped bum boys" and compared gay marriage to bestiality.
And In case you missed it, Boris Johnson wrote a novel called Seventy Two Virgins and it’s even worse than you might think: “Hooked nose” Kosovar Muslims, Jews who control the media, “half-caste” characters, a “Chinaman,” hunter-gatherer African immigrants, and all kinds of other racist tropes feature in this tale of a terrorist attack in London (The Independent has a full selection of awful excerpts here).
Even he when asked to comment on the stream of offensive statements during a Question Time election debate special, the Conservative leader said: “If you go through all my articles with a fine-tooth comb and pick out individual phrases, there’s no doubt that you can take out things that can be made to seem offensive." How could anyone consider voting for this  individual with his proven history of racism, misogyny, homophobia and  lies. The prospect of Johnson getting into power absolutely fills me with despair.
Johnson and the rest of the Tories  would throw  most of us under a bus without a moment's hesitation. Please, if you're a decent human being, do not vote Conservatives tomorrow. Remember Windrush, the hostile environment , Grenfell, NHS crisis, deaths by austerity, rising homelesness, food banks, universal credit. The Tories have time again targetted immigrants, the poor and women, who have borne the brunt of their austerity policies.
 Tthe British Conservative party is diametrically opposed  to the good of the British public and deliberately acts against their interests. Their motives driven by authoriarianism designed to disenfranchise all, unless  you are not a millionaire, the Conservative Party is not your friend, they are enemies of the people. Inhabited by people with no feeling at all.
 Aided and abetted by their friends in the Daily Mail, the Telegraph and the Scum newspapers. Rags that keep on pumping out the same disingeous and divisive rubbish. Plus the BBC misleading people with their parroting of Tory narratives and soundbites. We should not forget the Tory's ruthless , toxic and unjust policies. Their constant assaults on the NHS, people on welfare, the disadvantged, the poor, which include poorly paid workers. As a direct result of their policies we have got the growth of foodbanks, rising homelessness, dodgy benefit assessmentsts, the trebling of uniersity tuition fees, a boom in xero hours contracts, while anti-democratically forcing fracking on people who have clearly stated they don't want it, while at the same time passng new laws to ensure the wealthy stay wealthy, taking the side of big business while eradicating workers rights and continuing their attacks on young people, single parents, maintaining a hostile environment to refugees, slashing education and social security budgets, perescuting the poor for beng poor while  at same time they give their friends the millionaires tax breaks and award themselves pay rises. The list goes on and on, they are toxic and out of control.
The Conservatives with their feelings of self entitlement believe they are born to rule. Unconcerned by any principles except their maintenance of power, they U-turn  on positions at a drop of a hat, betray promises and even sacrifice their own in order to maintain control.The interests they serve are not yours or mine, but those of the bankers, financiers, fossil fuel magnates and the elite
 The Tory manifesto further threatens to “update” the Human Rights Act to rebalance rights in favour of “national security and effective government”. No detail is given, but this could refer to control orders, stripping people of their citizenship and deporting them to places that practice torture. It could also mean curbs on the right to protest, which was recently upheld by the courts in the case of Extinction Rebellion. In the event of a No Deal and civil unrest, more repressive measures will no doubt be contemplated. For the Tories, rights are not universal protections afforded to the vulnerable, but a privilege for the right sort of British citizen; another tool to sow division between “us” and “them”.
This is not the country I love. Vote Conservative 2019 and vote for more death and poverty, inequality and division. A Tory victory, coupled with a Hard Brexit, will give the elite all the excuses they need to strip back all the pay and conditions, environmental regulations as much as they want. The polls show a Tory lead at the moment , but it's shrinking, keep exposing the Tories for what they are, it's not to late to stop them before it's too late. We are on the cusp of changing the course of British history, for the benefit of generations to come.
 This election is a real chance to sweep aside the Tories and finally put an end to almost a decade of austerity, protecting the NHS and ending the climate of racism that is currently fostered  and to prevent climate catastrophe.Forget about the bloody weather and  get out and vote for change and a society, we can all be proud off. Give hope a chance. Kick out Johnson and the bloody Tories. Another world is not only possible, it's within our grasp. Imagine the delight of seeing Johnson become the shortest-serving prime minister since 1827. A labour victory under Jeremy Corbyn, that would leave us with a Christmas we could really look forward to.

Tuesday, 10 December 2019

International Human Rights Day :10 December 2019


International Human Rights Day is marked  on 10 December worldwide.This year's theme for Human Rights Day is Youth Standing Up for Human Rights. The United Nations, in its website, says it is "capitalizing on the momentum" gained after a year marked by the 30th anniversary celebrations of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. It also said that the UN is "spotlighting the leadership role of youth in collective movements as a source of inspiration for a better future."
The United Nations, through this year's theme, said they want to celebrate the youth's potential as "constructive agents of change" and have a large number of people help in promotion and protection of rights.
 Climate change is a serious threat to children’s rights. We must take Climate Action now.  Young people are at the front of the climate crisis movement, but may soon have to contemplate a more profound rebellion because, as pointed out by Greta Thunberg as she arrived for COP25, they are not being listened to despite the millions of school students who have taken to the streets. Students in Hong Kong are waging what will most likely become a life-and-death-struggle against Chinese authoritarianism. The recent Hong Kong elections show they have overwhelming support. Their brave and sustained protest is as catalytic in the global fight for democracy as the role played by the young people in South Africa in 1976. Don’t be misled by the occasional US or British flags, it’s democracy and rights — not neoliberalism and inequality, they already have that — the students want.
While some human rights defenders are internationally renowned, many remain anonymous and undertake their work often at great personal risk to themselves and their families. Human Rights Day is observed by the international community every year on 10 December. It commemorates the day in 1948 the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.In 1950, the Assembly passed resolution 423 (V), inviting all States and interested organizations to observe 10 December of each year as Human Rights Day.
  And ever since that auspicious day it has stood as the first major stride forward in ensuring that the rights of every human across the globe are protected. From the most basic human needs such as food, shelter, and water, all the way up to access to free and uncensored information, such has been the goals and ambitions laid out that day.
  "All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights," Article One of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights reads. "They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood."
  A milestone document that proclaimed the inalienable rights which everyone is inherently entitled to as a human being – regardless of race, colour, religion, sex, language, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status. It is the most translated document in the world, available in more than 500 languages.
 When the General Assembly adopted the Declaration, with 48 states in favor and eight abstentions, it was proclaimed as a "common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations", towards which individuals and societies should "strive by progressive measures, national and international, to secure their universal and effective recognition and observance".
 Although the Declaration with its broad range of political, civil, social, cultural and economic rights is not a binding document, it inspired more than 60 human rights instruments which together constitute an international standard of human rights. It has helped shape human rights all over the world.
 Today the general consent of all United Nations Member States on the basic Human Rights laid down in the Declaration makes it even stronger and emphasizes the relevance of Human Rights in our daily lives.The High Commissioner for Human Rights, as the main United Nations rights official, plays a major role in coordinating efforts for the yearly observation of Human Rights Day.
Human Rights Day reminds us that there is much to be done  and around the world to protect those who cannot voice or respond to perpetrated discrimination and violence caused by governments, vigilantes, and individual actors. In many instances, those who seek to divide people for subjective means and for totalitarian reasons do so around the globe without fear of retribution. Violence, or the threat of violence, perpetrated because of differences in a host of physical and demographic contrasts and dissimilarities is a blight on our collective humanity now and a danger for our human future.
Human Rights are the basic rights and freedoms that belong to every person in the world, from birth until death. They apply regardless of where you are from, what you believe or how you choose to live your life. They should never be taken away, these basic rights are based on values such as dignity, fairness, equality, respect and independence. But human rights are not just abstract concepts, they are defined and protected by law.
 The aim of Human Rights Day is to raise awareness around the world of our inalienable rights – rights to basic needs such as water, food, shelter and decent working conditions. In the UK we are protected by the Human Rights Act 1998, however in other countries, especially developing countries, the laws are not in place to protect people and to ensure that their basic needs are met.
For millions of people, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is still just a dream.Many people around the world are still denied the most basic of human rights on a daily basis. Women’s rights are still repeatedly denied and marginalised throughout the globe, despite 70 years of the milestone declaration on human rights. Confronted with widespread gender-based violence, hate and discrimination, women’s well-being and ability to live full and active lives in society are being seriously challenged.
Racism, xenophobia and intolerance are still  problems prevalent in all societies, and discriminatory practices are widespread, particularly regarding the  targeting of migrants and refugees. including in rich countries where men, women and children who have committed no crime are often held in detention for prolonged periods. They are frequently discriminated against by landlords, employers and state-run authorities, and stereotyped and vilified by some political parties, media organizations and members of the public.
Many other groups face discrimination to a greater or lesser degree. Some of them are easily definable such as persons with disabilities, stateless people, gays and lesbians, members of particular castes and the elderly. Others may span several different groups and find themselves discriminated against on several different levels as a result.
Those who are not discriminated against often find it hard to comprehend the suffering and humiliation that discrimination imposes on their fellow individual human beings. Nor do they always understand the deeply corrosive effect it has on society at large.
Nearly a billion people do not have enough food to eat, and  even in wealthier countries like the UK and the US where there is an increasing growth in food banks. Poverty is a leading factor in the failure to protect the economic and social rights of many individuals around the world. For the half of the world population living on less than $2.50 a day, human rights lack any practical meaning.
 In 2018, when marking the 70th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) Kumi Naidoo, the outgoing Secretary-General of Amnesty International, lamented that “if the leaders of the world were called upon to sign the UDHR today, they would be unable and unwilling to put human rights at the centre of global governance. Such a declaration would be impossible today”.Naidoo made this comment because Amnesty International in well placed to see how across the world, fundamental human rights are under attack.
Jails and cemeteries are filling up with human rights activists once more.But what’s unusual is that it’s not just happening in China, Russia or North Korea, but in countries that are outwardly democratic.
In India, described as the world’s largest democracy, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, is unapologetic as he propagates a hate-inciting extreme Hindu nationalism that tramples over Islam and other religions; annexes whole regions such as Kashmir and sanctions so-called “encounter killings”. At least five globally respected human rights lawyers are in prison, and more than 4,000 NGOs have had their licenses revoked.
Giving a lecture in the safety of Oxford University, veteran journalist Sagarika Ghose pointed out that the most “basic freedoms are under threat” and that “soon to be a journalist will be criminalised”. Her warnings are echoed by esteemed writers such as Arundathi Roy who in a recent article warns of a “shadow world… creeping up on us in broad daylight”.
In Turkey, President Recep Erdogan has used the “war on terror” as the pretext for a massive and globally unprecedented (at least in the democratic world) clampdown on civil society. According to Turkish activists 30,000 people are being held in pre-trial detention or have been convicted (they say 15% of all those in prison are there for offences of terrorism). A further 70,000 are on trial; 155,000 are being investigated by the police, but have not yet been prosecuted. Even the honorary
Chairperson of Amnesty International in Turkey, Taner Kılıç, is on trial and seems likely to be imprisoned.
In Brazil, indigenous land rights activists, trying to protect the world’s treasure of the Amazon, are being murdered, adding to the toll of an estimated three land activists a day who are losing their lives somewhere in the world.
In Zimbabwe, Zambia, Mozambique and Malawi activists are under attack. And so the story goes on… from continent to continent, from country to country. It is hard to imagine that an era that began with the Tiananmen Square and the fall of the Berlin Wall is ending with new walls going up all over the world.
In UN-talk what we are witnessing across the globe is politely described as “shrinking civic space”. They should be using other less euphemistic words: put another way, it’s the water-boarding of democracy.
This global clampdown on hope is sanctioned by big men with blond mops, misogynistic sexualities, guns. Truth-manglers such as Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk gently egg it on, as Sacha Baron Cohen so angrily yet elegantly pointed out recently.
 For this  Human Rights Day we must continue to  stand with all people targeted for giving expression to the vision and values embodied in the declaration. Every day must be Human Rights Day, as every person in the world is entitled to the full and indivisible range of human rights every day of his or her life.Global human rights are not selective in their value or meaning, nor are they limited to a day or time of year. Until all people have access to these human rights we must stand up, advocate for, and insist that more must be done. Human Rights Day should serve as a reminder to act for those lacking basic rights each and everyday. 
  Human Rights Day calls on us all to ‘stand up for someone's rights today!’ It reminds us what we have achieved over the years to respect, promote and protect human rights. It also asks to recommit and re-engage in championing these rights for our shared humanity since whenever and wherever humanity's values of equality, justice and freedom are abandoned, we all are at greater risk.
It’s important to acknowledge that human rights, have rarely been gifted to us through benevolent leaders. Rather, they have been won after long fought battles and collective struggle. We need to recognize and pay tribute to human rights defenders the world over, putting their lives on the line for others, our voice must be their voice. Lets work to achieve a better life for all. And more importantly, to continue to take a stand for people whose human rights are still not being met across the globe, find a way to use our voices for those who may not have an opportunity to advocate for themselves.  On Human Rights Day, let us remind ourselves that all human beings are equal in dignity & rights. In any civilized society, protection of human rights is most important. We need to create conditions, where people’s rights are protected and all can live a life of dignity.
 Just two days before the general election, party leaders have been asked to celebrate international Human Rights Day by pledging to safeguard the Human Rights Act 1998. A letter organised by the British Institute of Human Rights and endorsed by more than 100 organisations including lawyers groups, Liberty and Justice, calls for a commitment 'to protecting universal human rights in the UK'.
The signatories note the Human Rights Act draws on the universal rights set out in the 71-year old Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 'setting legal standards to protect people across the UK whether they are in hospitals or care homes, social services or places of detention, housing or schools'. https://www.bihr.org.uk/
Following the election, 'many decisions will need to be made about what sort of country we want to be, going forward, and what relationship people have with those we place in power'.
It concludes: 'We ask you to stand firm on our hard-won freedoms. We ask you to stand firm on ensuring that our Human Rights Act remains an integral part not just of our constitutional arrangements, but also of people’s everyday lives, enabling us all to live with equal dignity and respect.'
The Conservatives have been accused of attempting to water down the Human Rights Act after announcing vague plans to "update" the legislation in their election manifesto. The 59-page blueprint, launched by Boris Johnson  on Sunday, contains a promise to "update the Human Rights Act and administrative law to ensure that there is a proper balance between the rights of individuals, our vital national security and effective government".
The pledge comes after the the prime minister vowed to end prosecutions of ex-soldiers accused of murder during the Troubles in Northern Ireland , which would involve amending the act to exclude deaths before the legislation came into force in October 2000.
Tory MPs and members of Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) have long called for an end to prosecutions of veterans over killings during the Troubles, in an attempt to protect the armed forces from vexatious prosecutions.
But such a change to domestic legislation could put the UK at odds with the European Convention on Human Rights, according to legal experts.
Buried on page 48, the 2019 manifesto contains a single mention of the party’s pledge to “update” the 1998 HRA, which brings the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) into domestic law. It doesn’t specify what an update looks like, or when it will happen (beyond “after Brexit,” which isn’t much of a clue). The text is not bold; nor italic. The language is euphemistic and vague, indicating that the update will “ensure that there is a proper balance between the rights of individuals, our vital national security and effective government.” This is not a pledge intended to draw attention.
.We’ve known for years that the Conservatives want to undermine the Human Rights Act that safeguards our individual freedoms, and their manifesto confirms it. Remember too that their discredited and racist hostile environment has ruined lives and destroyed people’s trust in the services they need.
 As thousands of struggles have proved, human rights are a vital lever in the quest for equality and social justice. If governments will no longer protect human rights it will be up to us, the people to keep on fighting for them and ensure our human right are always upheld. If you do nothing else, make sure you vote. Find your local polling station and vote like your rights depend on it.

http://www.un.org/en/events/humanrightsday/ 

Thursday, 5 December 2019

Cassetteboy vs Boris Johnson

 

The wonderful return of Cassetteboy.It's the mash up the general election has been crying out for.
 To the tune of MC Hammer’s ‘U Can’t Touch This’, the remix uses cuts of the PM’s various speeches to warn voters: ‘You can’t trust me.’ accusing him of telling lies  on everything in the Tory manifesto from Brexit to the NHS.
Lyrics include:"I say the Tory party is the party of prosperity / but not for the 130,000 people killed by our austerity / Nor for disabled people robbed of money and their dignity / or the millions of children our policies have left in child poverty." “My Brexit is so hard/ Makes you say ‘Oh my word, what about my job security, sick pay and the economy?’/ These are the things you need to discuss/ When I say ‘Brexit won’t hurt you much’/ Remember the lies on the side of a bus/ I’m a guy you can’t trust.”
The video clip also highlights Johnson’s history of being sacked for lying, including from The Times for fabricating a quote in an article, and as shadow arts minister for allegedly lying about an extra-marital affair, accusing him of telling lies on everything in the Tory manifesto – from Brexit to the NHS. Please Vote No to Johnson and the rest of his friends , we simply cant trust any of them.
But who can we trust? I'd personally say, Listen to the teachers, Listen to the economists,
Listen to the firefighters, Listen to the foodbank volunteers, Listen to the patients, Listen to the students, Listen to the carers,Listen to the hardest hit.Listen  to the  voices that can deliver real change. Please  pass this message on, ignore the Tory propoganda.and lies

Medical Doctors Protest Failure of UK Home Secretary to Act on Mr Julian Assange


On 22 November, over 60 doctors from around the world  signed an open letter to the British home secretary Priti Patel (and shadow home secretary Diane Abbott) warning of their fears that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange — who is being held in Belmarsh maximum-security prison where he is being unjustly and cruelly incarcenated, as he fights plans to extradite him to the US to face espionage charges that carry a 175-year prison sentence — may die in British custody, and urging her to allow him to have “urgent expert medical assessment of both his physical and psychological state of health”, and that, if any medical treatment is required, for it to be “administered in a properly equipped and expertly staffed university teaching hospital.” 

 The doctors fear that if action is not taken immediately, that Assange could die in prison. Still, many people are demanding an explanation to why Assange is in Belmarsh prison at all. Persecuting him is persecuting truth and justice for all of us.

I’m pleased to note that the letter was picked up on by a number of significant mainstream media outlets  including the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Guardian. and was shared widely across social media. If you haven’t read the whole letter, I hope you will find it useful, and will share it if you do.

Despite worldwide media coverage of their open letter, more than 80 medical doctors have received no response from the UK government. The doctors are now calling on the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice to intervene.

“We reiterate our grave concern that Mr Assange could die of deliberate medical negligence in a British prison and demand an urgent response from the UK Government”, the doctors write.
Their second open letter has been sent to the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice the Rt Hon Robert Buckland QC.

“In our open letter, we urged the UK Government to change course immediately and transfer Mr Assange from Belmarsh Prison to a university teaching hospital for appropriate expert medical assessment and care. So far, we have received no substantive reply from the UK Government, nor has receipt of our letter been acknowledged."

 It concludes:

 “In our opinion the UK government’s conduct in this matter is irresponsible, incompatible with medical ethics and unworthy of a democratic society bound by the rule of law. We reiterate our grave concern that Mr Assange could die of deliberate medical negligence in a British prison and demand an urgent response from the UK government.”
 
 Julian Assange is one of the world’s most prominent political prisoners. The UK government must end his persecution. through Wikileaks, he has done the world a great service in documenting American war crimes, its spying on allies and other dirty secrets of the world's most powerful regimes, organisations and corporations. This has not endeared him to the American deep state.

Assange's persecution, the persecution of a publisher for publishing information that was truthful and clearly in the interest of the public - and which has been republished in major newspapers around the world - is a danger to freedom of the press everywhere, especially as the USA is asserting a right to arrest and try a non-American who neither is nor was then on American soil.

He had been granted asylum at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. But following a change of government in Ecuador, he was handed over to the British authorities last April for extradition to the USA. The sentence is already clear: if not the death penalty then life in a supermax prison and ill treatment like Chelsea Manning.

Julian Assange is not charged with any crime or misdemeanor in Britain  and has fully served his sentence for his single offense: jumping bail to avoid extradition to the United States via Sweden.

He was not and is not charged with any crime in Sweden. The sole charges against him originate in the United States, on purely political grounds, aimed at punishing Julian Assange for publication of accurate information provided by informed sources. This is a regular practice of all mainstream media , which now shamefully fail to speak out in defense of Mr Assange, even when they published exactly the same information that he did.

It is quite clear that in the current treatment of Jilian Assange, the United Kingdom is debasing itself as a mere instrument of political repression exercised by the United Statesv

 Assange was visited in May by Nils Melzer, who denounced his treatment as a form of “psychological torture” and again demanded an immediate end to Assange’s imprisonment. Prompting the decision by the doctors to take a public stand, Melzer issued a further statement on November 1, 2019 in which he warned: “Unless the UK urgently changes course and alleviates his inhumane situation, Mr Assange’s continued exposure to arbitrariness and abuse may soon end up costing his life.”

In their latest letter, the doctors concisely state: “The UK government’s refusal to take the required measures to protect Mr Assange’s rights, health and dignity appears to be reckless at best and deliberate at worst and, in both cases, unlawfully and unnecessarily exposes Mr Assange to potentially irreversible medical risks….

“When the UK, as a Permanent Member of the United Nations Security Council, repeatedly ignores not only the serious warnings of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture, but also its unequivocal investigative and remedial obligations under international and human rights law, the credibility of the UK’s commitment to human rights and the rule of law is fatally undermined.”

 Doctors who signed the open letter  also made statements that were included in a press release sent out with their latest letter.

Dr Richard House, Chartered Psychologist, former psychotherapist and senior university lecturer (UK) said : “The disgraceful treatment of Julian Assange should become a General Election issue, and the current government and Home Secretary held robustly to account for what appears to be deliberately inflicted suffering.”

Dr Victoria Abdelnur MD, Specialist in Integrative Trauma Therapy (Germany and Argentina)added : “The global medical community is watching, we know he needs urgent proper health care, and if he does not receive it soon, it will be crystal clear we are governed by criminals. The popular backlash will have astronomic proportions.”
 
 The very extradition of Julian Assange to the United States would at the same time mean the final death of freedom of the press in the West.

The latest letter can be accessed in full here and shared.

Follow Doctors for Assange on Twitter

https://twitter.com/Doctors4Assange


Don't extradite Assange


Sign this petition