Thursday 15 September 2022

After Sir Keir Starmer calls on protesters to “respect” those mourning the Queen, and not “ruin” their opportunity, lets also respect others that do not offer their deference.

 

 Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer signs the Proclamation of Accession of King Charles III.

Labour  leader Sir Keir Starmer formerly a human rights lawyer has urged protesters to “respect” those mourning the Queen, and not “ruin” their opportunity to say a private “thank you” to the late monarch.
He added that he  will return to Westminster Hall with his family to personally pay his respects at the lying in state after he joins the committee receiving the coffin in a professional capacity.
He said the country’s response to the Queen’s death has been “very moving”, and encouraged those who might want to protest to be considerate of people’s grief.
This announcement  came after activist on Tuesdays gathered outside St Giles’ Cathedral in Edinburgh carrying “blank canvases” to protest in solidarity against several arrests that have been made in relation to incidents during royal ceremonies.
Police Scotland have a few people in connection with allegedly breaching the peace following separate incidents earlier in the week. 
A woman was arrested and charged after an incident at the Accession Proclamation of King Charles III in Edinburgh on Sunday.after appeared in the crowd opposite the Mercat Cross, holding a placard denouncing imperialism and stating ‘abolish monarchy’.
One person shouted: ‘Let her go, it’s free speech,’ while others yelled: ‘Have some respect.’
Hecklers were also heard booing during the event.
Police Scotland said a 22-year-old is due to appear at Edinburgh Sheriff Court at a later date.
Another man has also been arrested and charged in connection to breach of the peace during the Queen's procession.
A 22-year-old was also detained after the Duke of York, Prince Andrew, was abused as he walked behind his mother’s coffin.
Social media videos showed a man shouting at Andrew before bystanders pulled him to the ground.
The man was released by police on an undertaking to appear at Edinburgh Sheriff Court at a later date.
A third man Symon Hill, 45, got accosted by police after shouting ‘who elected him?’ during the events proclaiming the accession to the throne of King Charles III.
A protester bearing a handmade sign saying “not my King” was also spoken to by police and escorted away from the Palace of Westminster in London. 
The history tutor told The Guardian: ‘I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone arrested on such threadbare grounds, let alone experienced it myself.
‘I didn’t in any meaningful sense disrupt the ceremony.’
Thames Valley police said a 45-year-old man was arrested ‘in connection with a disturbance that was caused during the county proclamation ceremony of King Charles III in Oxford’, and was later ‘de-arrested’.
The man was arrested under section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986 – referring to behaviour deemed likely to cause harassment, alarm or distress.
Paul Powlesland, 36, a barrister and nature rights activist from Barking in east London, said he was warned by police he would be arrested if he wrote ‘not my king’ on a placard. 
He travelled to London yesterday afternoon with ‘a blank piece of paper’, and recorded part of a conversation where an officer suggested he would be detained if he wrote down the phrase.
The video went viral on social media, and was viewed 700,000 times in four hours.
He said: ‘I went down there because I’ve been increasingly concerned by people who are just, you know, exercising rights to freedom of speech, being either arrested or threatened with arrest by the police.
‘An officer came up to me and began that conversation effectively asking for my details and then saying, if you write ‘not my King’ on it, then we may well arrest you for public order offences, being offensive.’
Asked about the police response to those wishing to protest, Sir Keir Starmer told BBC Breakfast: “The word I’d use around that issue is ‘respect’.
“I think if people have spent a long time waiting to come forward to have that moment as the coffin goes past, or whatever it may be, I think: respect that, because people have made a huge effort to come and have that private moment to say thank you to Queen Elizabeth II.
“Obviously we have to respect the fact that some people disagree. One of the great British traditions is the ability to protest and to disagree, but I think if it can be done in the spirit of respect
“Respect the fact that hundreds of thousands of people do want to come forward and have that moment, don’t ruin it for them.” 
Surely even members of society who are currently  deeply mourning the loss of the Queen can surely see the hypocrisy and irony of the situation,even when public sensitivities are at an all time high but on   Monday we will see food banks closed, funerals postponed, cancer scans cancelled, for some of us for these reasons,  alone the enforced  national mourning of the Queen is getting out of hand and over the top with a breathless non-stop coverage over the most minute events that has carried on unabated since the announcement of the 96 year old  Queens sad but peaceful demise.
And the proclamation that a man who is now sovereign over us subjects purely because he happened to be born, is deeply political and more than anything underlines peoples inherent right to protest both legally and morally. Indeed, should  be encouraged in any  rational society.The right to protest is all about disruption and making a big noise and we should respect the many who are sick to the back teeth of all the fawning coverage and embarrassing deference to the whole privileged lot of them. Republic, a group campaigning for Britain to have an elected head of state, condemned the "automatic accession"  and called for a "national debate on the future of the monarchy".
In a statement, Graham Smith, CEO of Republic, commented: "While we recognize that many people are reflecting on the loss of the Queen, Britain does need a debate on the future of the monarchy in light of King Charles' accession to the throne.
"A proclamation of a new king is an affront to democracy, a moment that stands firmly against the values most of us believe in, values such as equality, accountability and the rule of law.
"Britain has changed almost beyond recognition since 1952 and the last royal succession. In this modern and democratic society our head of state cannot simply step into the role without debate or without challenge to his legitimacy."
Smith said support for the monarchy had "to a large extent been buoyed" by Elizabeth II's personal appeal during her reign.
"We believe Britain needs to move to a democratic alternative to the hereditary monarchy. We believe that debate must start now," he concluded.
I believe it is seriously worrying that holding a sign saying not my king can get you removed by police. What ever your views on the monarchy, this should  seriously concern you.Where  for instance is the respect for groups such as Indigenous peoples and others who were subject to dispossession and oppression by the British monarchy who  may wish to express important political views about there significant and continuing injustices who do not respect the  life of unfettered privilege that the Queen enjoyed from the cradle to the grave, known for living in palaces and spending  money like water, and  disrespectful  to families struggling to make ends meet, Some commentators  have also pointed out  the vast disparity between the Queen's opulence  and the real life situations of her subjects.Though she remained popular,there seems little space for nuance or critique for this symbol of coloniality and imperialism whose wealth was accrued and built on the backs an blood of  African and Indigenous people. Not only is it seen as impolite to criticize the revisionist propaganda, it is now apparently dangerous to question the automatic ascension  of Charle as king.
It may be uncomfortable or even distressing for those wishing to publicly grieve the queen’s passing to see anti-monarchy placards displayed. But that doesn’t make it a criminal offence that allows protestors to be arrested.
The ability to voice dissent is vital for a functioning democracy. It’s therefore arguable that people should be able to voice their concerns with the monarchy even in this period of heightened sensitivity. The only way in which anti-monarchy sentiment can lawfully be suppressed is in a state of emergency. A public period of mourning does not meet that standard. Whatever your  views on the monarchy you should be able to express them in public without risking arrest oe intimidation by police officers. Thi is freedom of speech at its most basic. 
Protest is not a gift from the state , it is a fundamental right. and part of a healthy and functioning democracy. Please sign the following petition to oppose the Public Order Bill ad stand up for free Expression.https://action.libertyhumanrights.org.uk/page/106448/petition/1?ea.url.id=6062323  
Meanwhile, Charles  appears to be defying efforts to redeem his image  Deliciously insightful videos have been circulating online displaying  his pompous and arrogant ways, in one he displays his foul temper with an outburst at a leaky pen, and in another he dismissively waves at stationary to be taken of his desk, rather than move it himself, and for a long rime has been shamed for his contemptuous disregard for animal rights, as is the  case  for many other  members of his family. If you want to protest against the monarchy.These are your rights.https://netpol.org/2022/09/15/want-to-protest-against-the-monarchy-these-are-your-rights/
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Monday 12 September 2022

Why the title of ' Prince of Wales' remains so deeply offensive to many of the people of Wales.


King Charles III announced just one day after the Queen's sad death, the UK's longest-reigning monarch, that he was making William and Kate the new Prince and Princess of Wales during his first speech on Friday.
The King said he was creating his son and heir, William, Prince of Wales adding: “With Catherine beside him, our new Prince and Princess of Wales will, I know, continue to inspire and lead our national conversations, helping to bring the marginal to the centre ground where vital help can be given.”
Charles was given the title in 1958 by his mother. The king was only nine years old when he was bestowed with the title with many resenting the decision when  he was made Prince of Wales in a ceremony at Caernarfon Castle, Gwynedd, in 1969.
The title has always been controversial,  and for many republicans in Wales, beyond the jewels, stately homes  and questionable views of some its members ,the Royal family and  the title of Prince of Wales is seen as the living embodiment of Wales subservience to it's neighbour.
Les not forget  that the investiture of Charles as "Prince of Wales himself led to widespread protests in Wales with many resenting the decision. The group "Cofia 1282" ("Remember 1282", the death year of Llywellyn the Last ) leading protests against the investiture.
Welsh singer Dafydd Iwan  voiced his opposition and protest against investing Charles as Prince of Wales and also wrote a song "Carlo" mocking Charles. Iwan stated "[It is a] song to be taken lightly,  like the Investiture itself, and every other vanity. The shame is that there was meaning and a serious purpose to [the role of] Prince of Wales once."
The Welsh Language  society (Cymdeithas yr Iaith)  also held a rally against the investiture on the 29th of August, 1969 at Cilmeri , the site of the death of Llywelyn the last . On the day of the investiture, a few nonviolent protesters were arrested. Some were escorted away carrying signs saying “Cymru nid Prydain” (Wales not Britain). Others booed and made obscene gestures at the royal carriages. One protestor threw an egg at the Queen’s carriage as it passed by. Another threw a banana skin under the feet of the military escort as it processed by.
A few were so strongly opposed to  the ceremony that they decided to take more  drastic measures to disrupt the event. On the day of the investiture, 22 year-old Alwyn Jones and 37 year-old George Taylor set out to plant a bomb near a railway track in  Abergele,  the same same stretch of line that was set to carry Prince Charles to the  ceremony, Their intention was simply intended to disrupt , but both men lost their lives when the bomb went off prematurely - cementing their names in history as the 'Abergele Martyrs '' as some would call them, but managed at same time to alienate others to their cause.
They were both suspected of being members of the Mudiadd Amddifyn Cymru (MAC), or Movement for the Defence of Wales - a militant group that campaigned for a Wales free from British rule.
Now the  naming of Prince Williams as the new Prince of Wales has again stoked a debate on the issue, and much division with  many since becoming  enraged and angry after  the new king decided to ‘bestow’ the title on Prince William, an English Prince without asking the Welsh if they wanted another English Prince of Wales.and  a petition created after the Queen’s death calling for the Royals to “end Prince of Wales title out of respect for Wales” has since surged to over 19,000 signatures..
The petition says that since the days of the Welsh Princes the title has been “held exclusively by Englishmen as a symbol of dominance over Wales”.
The Royal title was originally given to Edward II of Caernarfon, son of Edward I who conquered Wales, as a means of confirming that the ‘Tywysog Cymru’ title previously held by native princes of Wales was subservient to that of the King of England.
Since then it has been held by 21 different heirs to the throne, although seven of them never became king.
There have previously been long periods of history, such as between 1553 with the accession of Edward Tudor and the passing of the title to Henry Frederick Stuart 63 years later, when the title did not exist at all.
The "Prince of Wales" title (Welsh: Tywysog Cymru) is a title historically used by native, Welsh princes since the 14th century. The last native Prince of Wales was Llywelyn the Last, killed by English soldiers in 1282 and his head was then paraded through the streets of London and placed on a Tower of London spike. Llywelyn's brother Dafydd was the first person of note to be hung, drawn and quartered and his head was placed next to Llywelyn's. Both their daughters were taken as infants and children and imprisoned.
But this happened centuries ago you might say. The truth is, that since the days of Llywelyn the Last and the "rebel" Prince of Wales, Owain Glyndwr, who led a 15 year fight against thee English , who eben  beat four royal armies, who was the last native born Welshman to hold the title , who even set up a Welsh parliament himself and was the last native born Welshman to hold  the title himself. The title has since been held exclusively by Englishmen as a symbol of dominance over Wales. To this day, the English "Princes of Wales" have no genuine connection to our country.
The title remains an insult to Wales and is a symbol of historical oppression. The title also implies that Wales is still a principality, undermining Wales' status as a nation and a country. In addition, the title has absolutely no constitutional role for Wales, which is now a devolved country with a national Parliament.
As Welsh actor, Michael Sheen put it;
"Make a break there. Put some things that have been the wrongs of the past right. There's an opportunity to do that at that point. Don't necessarily just because of habit and without thinking just carry on that tradition that was started as a humiliation to our country. Why not change that as we come to this moment where things will inevitably change."
I don’t think many people have any concept of Welsh history. I find it offensive and think now would have been a good moment to right a historical wrong.
Now that the Queen has  gone and her reign, a prominent part of Britain’s present for the entire lives of most of its current population, has passed on to the history books. A last living link with the country’s late and immediately post-imperial past.
The role of a reigning monarch is not one to be taken lightly by any means, and people fear that Prince Charles just doesn’t have what it takes to rise to the occasion. Whether because of his personality traits or capabilities or  something else entirely, if people don’t have confidence that he will do a good job, it will be hard for them to get behind him.
In 2021, the group https://www.republic.org.uk/ crowdfunded billboards across Wales calling for the abolition of the monarchy, with billboards appearing in Wales in Aberdare, Swansea and Cardiff declaring in both Welsh and English that "Wales doesn't need a prince", referring to Charles.
It seems almost too obvious to mention that  the Queen's  death, is undoubtedly  a sad occasion for many, but  currently creating much hysterias at a period of particularly intense uncertainty and angst about the country’s place in the world, its economic model, its identity and future constitution, and indeed about the future of the monarchy itself (already wobbling in some of its last remaining realms) and the Commonwealth, 
Nevertheless many currently  believe there is no sense for a devolved, democratic country like Wales to have a prince of Wales, these days,  with no constitutional function. Let England keep their royalty if they wish but it should not be forced on the people of Wales and other countries.

Friday 9 September 2022

Poem for a Queen


The Queen is dead, many are now in mourning
For what she represented, a time of deep reflection,
Dedicated to her people, majestic and regal
With Golden crown on head, forever dutiful,
A strong figurehead as our head of state
In her gilded palaces, respected full of grace
Distinguished, dependable and loving
For this reason tears are overflowing,
Others as cost of living bites very hard
Already feeling too much sorrow,
meding to beg, steal and borrow
So the vestiges of power and privilege
Could simply not follow or show allegiance,
Can not join in the choruses of salutation
Life too full of emptiness and bitter frustration,
Remembering how Elizabeth through her long reign
Served and rewarded the rich and the powerful,
Binded the poor to their fate, they could not escape
Expected those she ruled over to remain patriotic,
As she lived in luxury from the cradle to the grave 
Forgot at times to feel our collective hurt and pain
Today though I will avoid causing unnecessary offence
Acknowledge those currently struck by grief,
As her beloved son Charles takes over the throne
Will prepare myself for the debates that come. 

(Dedicated to Elizabeth Alexandra Mary or HRH  Elizabeth the Second, 21 April 1926 -8 September 2022 R.I,P.)

Wednesday 7 September 2022

Remembering the life of Revolutionary Welsh Socialist Republican Poet Harri Webb (7 September 1920 – 31 December 1994)


Revolutionary Welsh Socialist Republican Harri Webb was a prolific writer of poems, prose and plangent political commentary, who became  one of Wales's most popular poets, known for his wit and erudition, for his historical perspective and strong awareness of contemporary realities.
Harry (as his name was originally spelt) was born  on 7 September 1920 at Sketty, Swansea on the outskirts of the city into a working class family. When he was nearly two years old the family moved to 58 Catherine Street in the Sandfields, nearer the city centre, which remained the family home for over 70 years.  His father worked at the Strand electricity works, and later at Tir John Power Station.  Harry went to Oxford Street School and Glanmôr Secondary School He left Swansea in 1938 at the age of 18 after being awarded a scholarship to Magdalen College, Oxford to study medieval and modern languages, a period of his life to which he made virtually no reference in his writings. He graduated with a third class degree in 1941, the death of his mother having severely affected his studies. 
He joined the Royal Navy in 1941, where he served as an interpreter for the Free French in the Mediterranean, with periods in Algeria and Palestine, and action in the north Atlantic. He was demobilised in Scotland in 1946. 
After the war, he became politically active and joined  the Welsh Republican Movement (which was wound up in 1957), and edited its newspaper The Welsh Republican - Y Gweriniaethwr Some members of the party were arrested for burning  the Union Jack, and it faced accusations of initiating violence. They also conceived a Welsh republican flag, a tricolor with green, red and white bands. 
 After the movement's demise Webb was for a while an active member of the local Labour Party, but then,appalled by its attitude on the question of self-government for Wales, he joined Plaid Cymru. He edited the party's newspaper and stood as its candidate at Pontypool in the general election of 1970.
He took various jobs including working for Keidrych Rhys at the Druid Press in Carmarthen,  until in 1952 he began working at Cheltenham Public Library, and like poet Philip Larkin he became a librarian. Harri Webb was appointed Librarian at the Dowlais Branch Library in Merthyr Tydfil in 1954, which started his close association with this once radical town in Welsh history. The town, it's people and history feature in many of the poems written by Webb. 
In 1956 he published Dic Penderyn and the Merthyr Rising of 1831, a pamphlet in which he somewhat imaginatively retells the story of the rebellion. As a Welsh republican he became a well-known, popular, colourful character, who took an interest in the local history of the town. He learnt Welsh in his early adulthood and adopted the Dowlais dialect of the language, and was one of the founder members and chairman of the eisteddfod in Merthyr Tydfil. 
While in Merthyr Tydfil, Webb lived in Garth Newydd, an old house that had been given to the town during the Depression, and subsequently seemingly belonged to nobody.When Webb first moved in it was occupied by a group of pacifists. It became almost a nationalist commune and it was his home for 12 years where he was joined by other patriots, including his friend Meic Stephens. The house became a centre for Nationalist activities and the 'Free Wales' pirate radio was broadcast from an attic in the house in response to the ban on political broadcasts by Plaid Cymru. In the 1970's he took part in the BBC Wales programme, Poems and Pints. While living in Merthyr Tydfil he was also associated with Meic Stephens in the launching of Poetry Wales and they shared an interest in the writing of topical songs and patriotic ballads.
After working in Dowlais for ten years, in 1964 Webb began work at Mountain Ash Library in the Cynon Valley which was previously having been the largest borough in Wales without a public library service. He made innovations such as lending LPs, and buying books and periodicals to appeal to a female readership who were gaining more independence in this era, to some criticism from those wary of modernisation. He continued to work for Mountain Ash Library until 1974. The library has a memorial plaque dedicated to Webb installed in 1997 reading 'poet and librarian, bardd a llyfrgellydd, 1920-1994' unveiled by Meic Stephens and Gwilym Prys Davies.
Though he was an individualist, his political slant was one of uncompromising Welsh Republican Socialism. Harri Webb was a vivid platform speaker, reserving his most scathing invective for his erstwhile comrades in the Welsh Labour Party with its abysmal attitude towards self-government for Wales , though capable of being equally trenchant about Plaid Cymru when he thought it was failing to give a lead as a movement of national liberation, as at the time of the drowning of the Tryweryn Valley after the building of a reservoir by Liverpool Corporation. Webb was impatient with the Welsh Establishment and the London Welsh and detested the Tories with a fiery passion. 
Strongly influenced by the Scottish poet Hugh Mac Diarmid, writer and nationalist politician,Webb's poetry came to prominence during the 1960s, when political nationalism was beginning to make headway in the industrial valleys of South Wales, with the themes of the prevailing social conditions of the time.
Having changed his name to Harri, his  first collection of poetry, The Green Desert, was published in 1969 and won a Welsh Arts Council prize.Webb carried on living in Garth Newydd and commuting to the next valley until 1972, when he moved to Cwmbach near Aberdare, before finally retiring in 1974, the year that A Crown For Branwen appeared. This was followed by Rampage and Revel in 1977, and finally Poems and Points in 1983. During the 1970s Webb began writing scripts for television and published two collections of songs and ballads dealing with the more light-hearted sides of Welsh history. 
Webb's poetry which I am a huge admirer of is marked by his radical Welsh nationalist politics and a quasi-Christian sensibility, and most were written out of a deep and passionate commitment to the cause of Welsh independence. In form it was often simple and comic, in order that it might influence a wide audience. Few have written about Wales more intensively, steadily and passionately, or with a greater variety of approach, of genre, of style, than Harri Webb. He described himself as a 'poet with only one theme, one preoccupation', whose work is 'unrepentantly nationalistic'. The late Raymond Garlick said once "Webb is "the only poet of any real authority" in recent Anglo-Welsh poetry. 
Few poets in recent times have achieved the popularity of Harri Webb. Shortly after the opening of the Severn Bridge in 1966, Webb's "ode" to the new edifice was to be heard quoted widely throughout South Wales: Two lands at last connected Across the waters wide, And all the tolls collected On the English side. The squib was stamped on a thousand T-shirts and, for a while, lorry drivers coming out of Wales, with the rhyme emblazoned on their chests, would shout it at the imperious attendants who took their money.
Webb earned and enjoyed the status of People's Poet, thinking of himself as belonging to the ancient tradition of the Welsh Bard, whose function it was to rally his people against the foe, whether the English invader or the servile, collaborating Welsh. Take this short one for instance.

Advice to a Young Poet - Harri Webb
 
Sing for Wales or shut your trap-
All the rest's a load of crap.
 
He could be bitingly satirical in style, his Synopsis of The Great Welsh Novel has bought me much joy over the years and in humorous verse describes the state of Welsh society and culture:
 
 Dai K lives at the end of a valley. One is not quite sure
whether it has been drowned or not. His Mam
Loves him too much and his Dada drinks.
As for his girlfriend Blodwen, she’s pregnant. So
Are all the other girls in the village – there’s been a Revival.
After a performance of Elijah, the mad preacher
Davies the Doom has burnt the chapel down.
One Saturday night after the dance at the Con Club,
With the Free Wales Army up to no good in the back lanes,
A stranger comes to the village; he is, of course,
God, the well known television personality. He succeeds
In confusing the issue, whatever it is, and departs
On the last train before the line is closed.
The colliery blows up, there is a financial scandal
Involving all the most respected citizens; the Choir
Wins at the National. It is all seen, naturally,
Through the eyes of a sensitive boy who never grows up.
The men emigrate to America, Cardiff and the moon. The girls
Find rich and foolish English husbands. Only daft Ianto
Is left to recite the Complete Works of Sir Lewis Morris
To puzzled sheep, before throwing himself over
The edge of the abandoned quarry. One is not quite sure
Whether it is fiction or not.
 
The following was written  by Harri Webb in 1966 as his response to the by-election won by Gwynfor Evans in Carmarthen. It was the first parliamentary election won by Plaid Cymru by its president Gwynfor Evans. The tune for the song was composed by Meredydd  Evans, although it is usually sung unaccompanied and has been made popular by the well  known singer Heather Jones. It reflects the losses suffered by Wales under English rule, but ends with a defiant challenge to redeem the ancient language. The fourth verse of the song refers to the reservoirs  Elan and Tryweryn, valleys drowned  to supply water to Birmingham and Liverpool. Claerwen was the last dam built in Cwm Elan and the village of Llanwddyn was drowned  under Llyn Efyrnwy to supply water to Liverpool City. 
The song featured in the Green Desert, a performance and album of the poet’s work in 1972.

Colli Iaith - Harri Webb

Colli iaith a cholli urddas
Colli awen, colli barddas
Colli coron aur cymdeithas
Ac yn eu lle cael bratiaith fas.

Colli’r hen alawon persain
Colli tannau’r delyn gywrain
Colli’r corau’n diaspedain
Ac yn eu lle cael cleber brain.

Colli crefydd, colli enaid
Colli ffydd yr hen wroniaid
Colli popeth glan a thelaid
Ac yn eu lle cael baw a llaid.

Colli tir a cholli tyddyn
Colli Elan a Thryweryn
Colli Claerwen a Llanwddyn
A’n gwlad i gyd dan ddŵr llyn.

Cael yn ôl o borth marwolaeth
Cân a ffydd a bri yr heniaith
Cael yn ôl yr hen dreftadaeth
A Chymru’n dechrau ar ei hymdaith.

Colli Iaith

Losing language and losing dignity
Losing muse and losing bardism
Losing the golden crown of society
And in its place a shallow debased language.

Losing the old sweet-sounding strains
Losing the resounding choirs
Losing the harp’s skilful strings
And in its place the clamour of crows.

Losing creed, losing soul
Losing the faith of the old brave people
Losing everything pure and beautiful
And in its place dirt and mud.

Losing land and losing small-holdings
Losing Elan and Tryweryn
Losing Claerwen and Llanwddyn
And the whole country beneath a lake’s water.

Getting back from the door of death
A song and faith and respect for the old language
Getting back the old heritage
And Wales begins her own journey.

 
In his politically charged poem “Nightingales” Harri Webb invokes the names of many Welsh rivers, some of which have become polluted, such as the ‘sewered drabs’ of some of the south Wales rivers, while three dammed, or possibly damned rivers are confluenced together as a little triad; ‘Elan, Claerwen/Tryweryn of our shame.’ The fate of Tryweryn, and the inundation of the Welsh speaking community at Capel Celyn to slake the city of Liverpool’s thirst for water is well known and the name reverberates even today.  But the dispossessions in the catchments of the rivers Elan and Claerwen in mid Wales are much less known, or remarked upon, or mourned.
 
 Nightingales - Harri Webb
 
Once there was none and the dark air was dumb
Over the tree-stumps, the bare deforested  hills.
They were a legend that the old bards had sung
Gone now, like, so much, so much.
But once I heard them drilling away the dark,
Llandaf was loud with them all of a summer's night
And the Great Garth rose like a rock from their storm.
This most of all I desire: to hear the nightingales
Not by Taff only but by all our streams,
Black  Rhymney , sullen Ogwr, dirty Ebbw,
Dishonoured Tawe and all our severed drabs.
And others whose names are an uninvited music
(Wales, Wales, who can know all your rivers?),
The nightingales singing beyond the Teifi,
By Aeron, Ystwyth , Rheidol, and those secret waters
The Beacons hold: Rhiiangoll, Tawell, Crawnon,
By Hepte and Mellte outstanding Sewd Einion Gam
(But let them not sing by Elan, Cherwyn, Fytnwy
Or Tryweryn of the Shame.)
You who have outsung all our dead poets,
Sing for them again in Cwm Prysor and Dyffryn Ceiriog,
And humble Gwydderig and Creidiol, do not forget them.
And that good man, no poet, who gave us a song
Even sweeter than yours, sing for him at Llanrhaeadr,
And in Glyndyfrdwy, what needs to tell you to sing? 
Sing in the faded lands, Maelienydd and Elfael,
And in the plundered cantrefs that have no name.
Come back and sing to us, we have waited too long,
Fr too long have not been worth singing for.
The magic birds that sang for heroes in Harlech
And hushed to wander the wild Ardudwy sea
And they of Safaddan that sing only for princes,
We cannot call them again, but come you
And fill our hearts like the hearts of other men.
Shall we hear you again, soon, soon?
 
The hallmark of his many essays and reviews over three decades was a pungent style designed to provoke, scathing yet erudite. Deflated by the 1979 Devolution vote, he despaired that the changes he sought would ever be made and endured a period of silence.
After suffering a serious stroke in 1985 which left him virtually housebound, sad and lonely,seeing few of his old friends and virtually ceased to write poetry.He found some solace, however, in the Anglican faith of his boyhood, indulged his passion for the American cinema of the 1940s, and continued to read extensively in the languages at his command. Although his head was turned more than once, he never married.
His last public act was to announce, in 1985, that he would write no more in English, adding with characteristic hyperbole that English was "a dying language" and that the only language for a true Welshman was Welsh.
His close affinity to Swansea stayed with him until his final days , and after a long period of illness he moved to St. David's Nursing Home in St.Helen's Road, Swansea.It was here that he died in his sleep on the morning of 31 December 1994, a 'Swansea Jack' from birth to death. 
His mother had died in 1939 while he was at University, and his father in 1956, and both had been buried in St Mary’s churchyard, Pennard. Harri Webb was buried in that same grave beyond the east wall of the cemetery on January 6, 1995.
His Collected Poems were published in December 1995, edited by his friend Meic Stephens, owner of the copyright of his work, stands as testimony to his genius as a poet. In his memory the Harri Webb Prize for poetry was established. Long may he be remembered for his devotion to Welsh culture and for his radical contribution that.focused his articulate attention on the glories, the particularities and the plight of his nation.

Monday 5 September 2022

As Liz Truss becomes new Prime Minister now more than ever we should loudly and clearly say no to her odious plans


Shit so Liz Truss is our new Prime minister,after Tory party members, in their  infinite wisdom, have finally  foisted one of the most right wing PMs ever on us, after winning most votes in the 3 month  Conservative Party leadership contest, succeeding the clown Boris Johnson who resigned in July after a series of scandals. Truss defeated rival Rishi Sunak with 81,326 votes to 60,399 among party members and will take over as leader on Tuesday, as Britons face mounting economic and social crisis.
This is really not good news at all. It's  hard to imagine anything worse for the UK with this announcement, God help us all. Truss 47,will take over a Conservative government that is deeply unpopular, that is facing multiple crisis in the country, with steep rises  in energy and food prices, long waiting lists for hospital treatment, and and public sector workers, dock workers and even lawyers going on strike. 
She has already declared war on the poor. Slashing taxes for the super rich  while binning workers  rights; Under her we will see more low/middle income families heading to food banks and joining NHS queues. She is also pressing ahead with the Government’s most toxic plans, like their Rights Removal Bill. This bill would rip up our Human Rights Act, stop people from challenging injustice and even allow the Government to decide who does and who doesn’t have rights. She’s said she’ll re-start the Rwanda plan as soon as she can. She even said she’ll "extend it" by signing more of the same deals with new countries.
This plan is already causing immense human suffering. Treating vulnerable people in search of safety like human cargo is cruel. The plan is wrong in principle and unworkable in practice.  At a time when the nation is gripped by a spiralling cost of living crisis, as Prime Minister, Liz Truss should reassess spending any more money on outsourcing our international obligations to provide safe haven. Instead the focus should be on improving the fairness and efficiency of the asylum system. Decreasing the extensive backlogs in the system and housing people in communities instead of hotels, will not only save the Government money, but crucially be more humane.
It’s hard to see someone represent our country with plans like these. She  has no ideas or solutions for the massive problems facing the UK right now.Truss hasn’t offered any answers to the cost of living crisis, and her refusal to commit to action on energy bills has made permanent damage to the credibility of the UK government ahead of a catastrophic crisis. Energy bills should be at the top of Liz Truss' to do list. Households up and down the country have had no answers to the financial catastrophe, debt and hardship caused by astronomical energy bills.  This is the time to push for urgent action to freeze energy prices and write off the £2 billion energy debt that UK households have already taken on and  return the energy price cap to pre-April levels and extend it to small businesses and charities.
 Under Truss, we're set to see more of the same crisis and chaos as under Boris Johnson . Anti-democratic changes, deportation of refugees, continued weakening of our human rights. Days of darkness loom ahead .Looming over Truss’s new government will be the long shadow of Boris  Johnson, whose time in  office saw  approval ratings and voter intentions plummet for the Conservative Party. 
Throughout the leadership campaign, Truss has been seen by most as the Johnson continuity candidate and enjoyed the backing of many of his loyalists.Truss was among the high-level ministers that remained loyal to Johnson in the final death throes of his leadership, which by the end had been engulfed by several political controversies and scandals, while other top officials jumped ship.Truss didn't resign, saying she was a “loyal person” All this means though  is she will be forever tied to the Johnson legacy.  This could ultimately become a weight around her neck, as the specter of Johnson risks overshadowing anything Truss might do to tackle the misery that many Britons are set to face this winter. Times are tough and getting tougher as inflation soars and Britain’s cost-of-living crisis worsens. Truss’ focus on stimulating the economy through tax cuts is unlikely to provide much short-term relief. Truss will face a challenge to reunite her toxic  party and face the challenges of what could the worst winter in decades,
Truss is a political chameleon and shapeshifter who has gone from a radical Liberal democrat who called for the abolition of the monarchy and the legislation of soft drugs to a flag-bearer of the Euroskeptic right wing of the Conservative Party.  Truss, who was only elected to parliament in 2010, has in a relatively short period of time, established herself as a political force of nature who pursues her agenda with relentless vigor and unequivocal enthusiasm.  But after a decades-long transformation that has seen her personal views change enormously, many will be asking what exactly Britain’s new leader stands for.  Many who have observed her over the years question whether she has any sincere beliefs at all, or if she simply endorses whatever is the most convenient at the time.The only constants in her political views  have been  her views on individual  liberty and the pursuit of career advancement.
Fittingly, her campaign to become leader was characterised by screeching U-turns. At times this has bordered on the comic. Cringingly over-rehearsed and clunky performances in TV debates have been married together with embarrassingly short-lived policies, announced and unannounced within hours. These U-turns are, at least in part, a symptom of the complete lack of clarity among the ruling class as to which policy they should adopt in the face of such a storm of crises for their system. They are united on just one thing: that working-class people must be the ones who pay.
If we look across Britain, we can see just how much damage 12 years of Tory chaos have inflicted on us. Services stripped to the bone. A British economy left to rack and ruin. And families forced to struggle as prices  skyrocket.  12 years , four prime ministers, and nothing to show for it. Lets be in no doubt 13 years of Tory class war is set to get even  worse.
Let's  not forget the fact Truss has no popular mandate, but nor does she have the next best thing: a mandate from the Conservative Party’s 357 elected MPs. Just 50 of them ,less than a seventh of the parliamentary party, voted for her in the first round. Only 113,less than than a third  voted for her in the fifth and final round when she beat Mordaunt by a mere eight votes and trailed Sunak by 24 votes. More than 200 have failed to back her. She is the first Conservative to become prime minister without the support of a majority of her parliamentary party and is the third Tory in a row who has risen to this post without facing a General Election. 
I offer her no congratulations at all,was useless as foreign secretary will be even worse as PM, just wish  the Queen could just tell her to fuck off. Now more than ever we should loudly and clearly say no to Liz Truss's odious plans and hopefully when a General Election is eventually called, she and the rest of the Tories are  booted  out of  office for good. Some earlier thoughts can be found here https://teifidancer-teifidancer.blogspot.com/2022/08/your-next-prime-minister-everyone.html

Sunday 4 September 2022

September Song

 

As summer fades ,the cost of living crisis  spiralling

Seek shadows of comfort away from life's trials,

May portals of hope deliver bright blessings

As golden leaves fall gracefully from above,

And brilliant photons burst from distant stars

Flooding the contours of time and space

To allow light to illuminate the human race 

Cancel out the darkness, allow poets to sing

Cast their inner vision, while sap still strong

No bardic school just a pithy pulse of truth

Continuing to  release the chains that shackle

Remember love is music that forever resonates

Carried on the streets, opening up our hearts

Tearing through obstacles and barriers

A lifeboat that can seriously heal the world

Get ready to ride the storms ahead

Beyond the swill keep on navigitating.


Friday 2 September 2022

Boris Johnson ridiculed after suggesting people should buy a new kettle to save £10 on power

Outgoing prime minister Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson, who in 2019 was gifted an 80 seat majority on just 43.6% of votes cast.has been ridiculed for suggesting poor people should buy new kettles (which will cost £20) so that they can save £10 a year on their energy bill. 
Johnson made the bizarre suggestion, then became tongue-tied, in his last major policy speech in Suffolk where he pledged £700 million to Sizewell C nuclear power station to help Britain generate its own energy. 
After warning us  it would be 'absolute madness' not to push ahead with the nuclear project as Russian President Vladimir Putin wreaks havoc with global oil and gas markets. He said :"If  Hinkley Point C were  running now, it would be fuelling fuel bills by £3bn. 
So you have to look ahead  and you have to beware the false economy,
 “If you have an old kettle that takes ages to boil, it may cost you £20 to replace it. But if you get a new one, you’ll save £10 a year for every year.....£10 a year, every year, on your electricity bill,
The UK is currently experiencing a cost of living crisis  which is set to worsen  as energy prices caps surpass £3,500 in October. 
Twitter users were quick to pick up on the suggestion, after the clip went  viral  with one person writing: “He’s now outright taking the mickey of those drowning in costs, as he comes back home from his luxury traveling around Europe.”
Another user said: “Boris Johnson says we should spend £20 on a new kettle which will shave a tenner off our energy bills, even now as the UK crumbles, as people beg, steal, borrow to survive (because of his party) it’s one big joke.”
Aren't Tories brilliant at economics? It;s like suggesting using a thimble to bail out the Titanic after it struck the iceberg.  Johnson’s “kettle” moment is like Trump’s “bleach” moment or Tony Abbott’s “suppository” moment. It’s on that level. This seems ridiculous, but it's absolutely intentional. Boris Johnson and the Tories have nothing but utter contempt for people. Don’t forget: every Tory MP voted confidence in keeping  Johnson  as PM for the summer.  They actually voted for this 
What a way to go though in a truly insulting, idiotic, out of touch, contemptuous and glib manner to the very end. A disgrace to his office and country. An  absolute embarrassment of a human being with a huge legacy of failure on every front. History will record this -  Johnson is undoubtedly the worst PM we’ve ever had. By some distance. Not just bad, staggeringly so, a dishonest, venal,  arrogant, mendacious, unprincipled, divisive failure who in three years almost destroyed the country.
Let us not forget that Boris Johnson was known to be a liar long before he became PM. He was fired twice for lying, once by the leader of the Conservative Party. But each time he was allowed to return to work, to win promotion and to get away with it. It worked for him and so he kept doing it. The damage  that he has been allowed to inflict the country as a result  is immense.
He presided over the largest number of covid deaths in Europe He raised taxes by the most in 70 years Biggest drop in living standards since 1815 Squandered Billions on track and trace, the cost of living crisis .alongside the parties, the corruption scandals, the cover-ups, the Afghan disaster, the twisted wreck of lies and broken promises, .who right to the end  the great tub of lard could not resist taking the piss with his ‘Buy a new kettle’ speech. Churchill would have been proud.
The following is well worth a read on  his toxic legacy as prime minister and increased authoritarianism and how he rigged uk politics for the tories:
Why is Johnson who  is leaving office in disgrace  booted out of office by his own party even  having a farewell tour, and still wasting public money? He has been widely accused  of shirking his Downing Street  duties and  jaunting of on luxury holidays ever since he reluctantly  agreed to resign at the start of July, Despite calls for  him to leave office early and let a caretaker prime minister take over. All this happening while millions of is on the UL are being plunged into crisis  over crippling energy bill costs.
I'd rather spend £20 for a ringside seat in a courtroom should  Johnson  quite rightfully face criminal proceedings.who has brought more misery, poverty and lack of trust than anyone could’ve imagined  Send him down now and good riddance! 
Johnson is expected to step down as prime minister on Monday 5 September, when either Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak will take the role after being voted leader of the Conservative Party.They all said we had the best with Johnson, but either pair, could still be worse carrying on the legacy of cronyism and corruption and not taking action immediately on the cost of living/ energy crisis  currently spiralling out of control  leaving so many pushed  to the edge, worried about paying for food energy and fuel over the next year  .God help us all. 
How I'd like to ask  are dangerous clowns like this still  running the country and why are we putting  up with it ? This country and its people, have been treated like a plaything by Boris Johnson and the Tory Party for far to long..Time to get rid  of them all at the earliest opportunity.
Don't forget to support the Don't Pay campaign for October 1st, the day that the energy  price rise comes into effect, we need to show that we will not be helping energy companies make record breaking profits while people freeze and starve to death. Enough is enough!  https://dontpay.uk/
 
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Tuesday 30 August 2022

Remembering Revolutionary Black Panther Fred Hampton ( 30/8/48-4/12/69)


 

Leading Black Panther Fred  Allen Hampton was born. on  the 30th of August 1948 in Summit ,Illinois to Francis and Iberia Hampton two factory workers who had migrated north as part of the Great Migration of Black Americans out of the south..Fred Hampton  was key in forming links between the Panthers and working-class people of all races. 
Hampton grew up with an older brother and sister. His family was friendly with the family of Emmett Till before Till's 1955 murder. Hampton's family moved to Maywood, another Chicago suburb when Hampton was 10. Hampton attended Irving Elementary School and Proviso East High School. In high school, he led the school's Interracial Committee. He also protested the school only nominating white girls to run for homecoming queen, which resulted in the inclusion of Black girls.
After graduating with honors from Proviso East High School, Hampton studied pre-law at Triton Junior College. He also attended Crane Junior College (later  Malcolm X College) and the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle.
Hampton became involved in the civil rights movement,  and led the Youth Council of the NAACP's West Suburban chapter, growing membership to more than 500. He advocated for a community pool in his hometown of Maywood, which led to an arrest for "mob action."
In November 1968, Hampton helped found the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party. From his base in Chicago, he served as chairman of this local chapter. Though Hampton was just 20, he became a respected leader in the Party, aided by his talent for public speaking and experience in community organising,  
Many saw him as the next possible Martin Luther King or the next Malcolm X, or perhaps the next great leader of Black Americans. He combined a huge personality  with a brilliant, critical mind and became a charismatic educator and speaker. His public statements on capitalism, racism, politics, Marxism and socialism were peppered with slang and profanity that refused to bow to the rules of the system. He sought to unite people through socialism, against the capitalist system, fighting against racism and discrimination  through practice and deeds, seeking to find solutions that would improve poor and working peoples lives, through struggle, without getting bogged down in watered down reformity.
He sought to do this through observation and practice. Such interracial working class organizing and open criticism of the capitalist economic system made him dangerous. It was one thing to organize along racial lines. It was another to try to unite the white, Black and Hispanic workers together in working class solidarity!  A dangerous message then,  still is today I guess.
 Fred Hampton was a dedicated revolutionary who studied theory and carried this through into everyday action. Throughout 1969, he maintained a demanding speaking schedule; he organised weekly rallies in support of BPP members in jail or on trial.
His organisation  provided breakfasts for poor school children and a free medical clinic for those that needed it. Hampton himself also taught political education classes. He also managed  to persuade two of Chicago's most powerful street gangs to stop fighting one another.
His attempt at unification of different peoples struggles  bought him to the attention of J.Edgar Hover and the F.B.I. From the 1950s until the 1970s, the FBI’s Counterintelligence Program (COINTELPRO) had already  been targeting  leaders of activist organizations like Fred Hampton. The program served to undermine, infiltrate, and spread misinformation (often through extrajudicial means) about political groups and the activists who belonged to them. COINTELPRO targeted civil rights leaders such as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as well as radical groups like the Black Panther Party, the American Indian Movement among others.  As Hampton’s influence in the Black Panthers grew, the FBI began to focus on his activities, opening a file on him in 1967.
The FBI enlisted a man named William O'Neal to infiltrate and sabotage the Black Panthers Party. O'Neal, who had been previously arrested for car theft and impersonating a federal officer, agreed to the task because the federal agency promised to drop the felony charges against him. O’Neal quickly gained access to Hampton by becoming both his bodyguard and a security director in Hampton’s Black Panther Party chapter.  
During an early morning police raid,on December 4, 1969,  he and fellow Black Panther Mark Clark were assassinated in a hail of bullets by the FBI and Chicago police. Hampton who was only 21.had been asleep when first hit, and, as he lay prone on the floor, was shot twice at point-blank range in the head. His body was then dragged into the doorway in a pool of blood.
The police opened fire on the remaining bedroom, hitting several Panthers repeatedly. The survivors were beaten, dragged into the street, and arrested on a charge of the attempted murder of the police officers who had carried out the raid, and aggravated assault. Many in the Chicago African American community were outraged over the raid and what they saw as the unnecessary deaths of Hampton and Clark.in what was seen as a serious attempt to undermine the Black Panthers powerful message, his  death was an act of police brutality. His death was government-sanctioned murder. His death was an assassination. His death was an execution. 5,000 people attended Hampton’s funeral where Reverends Ralph Abernathy and  Jesse Jackson eulogized the slain activist.   
It is tempting to look back at the raid as a singular example of law enforcement run amok; a violent and inexcusable governmental reaction to the political climate of the time. And yet, so much of what happened in the aftermath is familiar to anyone who has studied systematic police violence ever since. today..
The official investigation into the shootings was a farce, and it was left up to the survivors and the BPP to pursue a civil case against the SPU and the FBI. Finally, in 1983, it was acknowledged that there “had in fact been an active governmental conspiracy to deny Hampton, Clark and the BPP plaintiffs their civil rights”.
Damages of $1.85m were awarded to the survivors and the families of the deceased.
In 1990, and later in 2004, the Chicago City Council passed resolutions commemorating December 4 as Fred Hampton Day.
The saying most often associated with Fred Hampton is: “You can kill a revolutionary, but you cannot kill a revolution. You can jail a liberation fighter, but you cannot jail liberation.
Fred Hampton Jnr was born a few months after his father’s murder. He, too, is active in the African-American revolutionary movement and has spent almost nine years in jail on politically-related charges..
While he met a tragic and untimely end, it is important to remember that he was killed for his ideas, because those ideas carried so much weight and . they  still do. Although many years have since gone since his passing, the peoples love for this man remains strong. His powerful message  remains strong. People still fighting discrimination and ongoing racism.Fred Hampton is a hero in the struggle for Black liberation, revolution and socialism. He should be remembered and his example should be followed by all progressive and revolutionary people.In 2004 the Chicago City Council passed a resolution commemorating December 4 as Fred Hampton Day.
In the courtroom at a 1969 trial for a trumped up robbery charge, only months before he was killed, the 21 year old gave an amazing speech  defending himself and all Black people, while at the same time calling on all working people to unite in revolutionary solidarity. There is no better way to end this article than with his words, passionately explaining the beliefs that he died for.

" We got to face some facts.  That the masses are poor, that the masses belong to what you call the lower classes, and I talk about the masses, I'm  talking about the white masses, I'm  talking about the black masses, and the brown masses, and the yellow masses.
We've got to face the fact that some people say you fight fire best with fire, but we say you put fire out best with water. We say you don't fight racism with racism. We're going to fight racism with solidarity.
We say don't fight capitalism with no black capitalism, you fight capitalism with socialism. "

Fred Hampton's powerful message  remains strong. People still fighting discrimination and ongoing racism.

Fred Hampton - Political Prisoner
 
 

I am a revolutionary - Fred Hampton



Monday 29 August 2022

Your next Prime Minister everyone!

 


Your next  Prime Minister everyone! Seems there is no cost of living crisis for Liz Truss  who has claimed nearly £5,000 in  taxpayer expenses on gas and electric in the last five years .Yet she says she won’t “bung more money into the system” to help hard-up Brits facing fuel bills of £3,500 a year – and rising. So no need for looting for her  or to go cold or hungry or worry about  energy supply being cut off cause the public pay her bills even though many cant pay their own. 
If it were not for the Conservative Party’s renowned historic reputation for nepotism, it would be a complete mystery with regards to how Truss has got anywhere near political office.I would‘t trust Liz Truss to run a bath. This woman will be more incompetent than Boris Johnson Mark my words   On one occasion,  she was exposed as either unable or unwilling to spell ‘literate’. She also once blew 3.5k in a restaurant (and claimed it back as expenses). I'm sure she will be very understanding about a pensioner on 800 quid a month worrying about how they'll manage a 3.5k energy bill. 
As Environmental Secretary, she backed David Cameron’s Britain Stronger In Europe campaign for the 2016 EU Referendum, only to simulate the behaviour of an unabashed Brexiteer as soon as the winning side proved not to be her own. She then U-turned to passionately advocate for Theresa May’s deal with the EU (though also saying that no deal would be a more attractive option than remaining in the European Union, to her credit) only to then back Boris Johnson’s amendment of the deal which was worse, having offered not one, but two borders between Northern Ireland and Great Britain. She appears to flip-flop on issues of policy more than the fish she no doubt wishes British fishermen to surrender to the French. This brings us to Truss’ position on the Northern Irish protocol today, namely her will to abolish it.   
Of course, all those who voted for the deal in the first place deserve to bear the brunt of this criticism, not just Truss. But given the fact that she has been constantly metamorphosing throughout her political career – first from a Liberal Democrat to a Conservative, second from a One Nation open door centrist to hard line Thatcherite, and third from an attendee of marches supporting the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament to someone who seems to now froth at the mouth at the prospect of nuclear war – it would be foolish to assume that she has political conviction beyond her delusional self-image. 
For many the  biggest issue in the UK right now is the seemingly uncontrollable cost of living crisis. With annual  household bills expected ,  to reach over £4,200 in January Truss has rejected financial help for unprecedented bill increases as 'Gordon Brown economics.' 
'The first thing we should do a Conservatives is help people have more money of their own,' she claimed 'What I don't support is taking money off people in tax and then giving it back in handouts.'handouts' 
 Her cost-of-living plan or complete lack of one  would give *10 times* as much to the rich as those who need it.  
Top 10%: £936 
Bottom 10%: £92 
In the time that Truss has been the minister for Women and Equalities, more than half of women have admitted they believe women’s equality is in danger of going back to the 1970s at work, home and in society, according to a Guardian survey.
last September, Truss was accused of treating the position like a ‘side hustle’ by the women and equalities committee. The committee also accused the government of regressing ‘equal rights after decades of progress’ through their lacklustre approach.
In terms of her voting record on LGBTQ+ rights, in May 2013, Truss was one of 117 Tories to vote in favour of marriage equality, then in July 2019 she voted to permit same-sex marriage in Northern Ireland. In September 2020, she was criticised by trans rights campaigners when she announced reforms to the Gender Recognition Act would not include a right to self-ID for trans people. 
In 2021 Truss announced the government’s proposals for a conversion therapy ban, with a draft bill in spring 2022. Many critics called it a ban ‘in name only’, with major loopholes remaining, for example, talking therapies for over-18s will not be outlawed. Conversion therapy for transgender people will also not be included in any ban. 
She was recently accused of delaying  a Foreign Office human rights report because of Rwanda criticism . Truss also said that Boris Johnson "did a fantastic job as prime minister." As Truss and Sunak attempted to woo Conservative members. remember we have no say  in who will be our next PM it became very clear they were both working very hard to assure than an  even more hostile environment will help to restore the green pastures of this crumbling nation.
And as a minister who also appoints members to the Equalities and Human Rights Commision's board, Truss' record of both human rights and foreign policy is concerning. After resuming arms sales to Saudi Arabia  in July 2020, days later, seven children and  two women were killed in a Saudi-led air strike,  Truss was subsequently branded " deeply cynical" by human rights group Amnesty International for arguing  that apparent war crimes by Saudi  forces in Yemen had been "isolated incidents " I don't thin this lack  of concern  for human rights is going to disappear when she becomes  prime minister.
Truss recently removed commitments to abortion, scxual health rights  and bodily autonomy from  an official statement on gender equality signed by more than 20 countries. 
Dubbed the ‘true blue’ candidate of the leadership race for sitting firmly on the right wing of the Conservative party, Truss is considered the economic descendant of the witch  that was Margaret Thatcher  and plans to cut tax immediately.
Under my leadership, I would start cutting taxes from day one to take immediate action to help people deal with the cost of living,’ she has said – with no mention of rising food prices, energy bills, transport costs or affordable housing.
Through appealing  to the Conservative base with populist soundbites and meaningless phrases, Truss has cemented her position as a person of power , while ignoring the  chaos she has been complicit in crafting.and while on the brink of the worst cost of energy crisis for a century wont pledge too scrap the energy price rise.  
There’s a class war in this country, and it’s being waged from above with such a callous disregard towards the needs of the most vulnerable. Social services should step in and take Britain away from the Conservatives on the grounds of neglect and dereliction of duty in a time of unbelievable crisis.Tey have entirely broken trust with the British people and no not have a mandate to govern, Join the campaign to fight back. http://wesayenough.co.uk

Friday 26 August 2022

Rocketing energy bills inflict misery on households


 
Households in Great Britain face a  gigantic leap in energy bills from October after the regulator raised the energy price cap, taking the average gas and electricity bill to an eyewatering  £3,549 a year. In a blow for hard-pressed consumers already struggling with soaring inflation, Ofgem approved the £1,578 increase on the current figure of £1,971 for the average dual-fuel tariff – a rise of 80%. The cap will be almost treble what it was a yearas a year earlier last October, when it was raised to £1,277. The announcement comes as households attempt to budget for a tough winter. Rocketing energy bills have fuelled rampant inflation, which breached 10% last month  and is forecast by some economists to climb to 18% from January.
The scale of harm caused by these price rises needs to sink in. A warm home this winter will be a pipe dream for millions as they are priced out of a decent and healthy quality of life.This will be the biggest attack on living standards in decades piling further misery onto so many households.Your energy bill is a direct result of not voting for Jeremy Corbyn.
Fuel poverty charity National Energy Action (NEA) estimated that the rise would increase the numbers  of UK households in fuel poverty from 4.5 million last October to 8.9 million  this October, taking into account the Government's measly support package announced  in May, which should be extended and increased as soon as possible.
No one should go cold or hungry,  but Ofgem  is condemning millions of us to starve or freeze this winter. I thought a regulator was there to protect consumers following privatisation. All Ofgem are doing is protecting the super-profits of the energy companies which  make £6 million pounds an hour, this is a cost of greed crisis and in many cases could ne a death sentence. it's  disgusting.
Jonathan Brearley, CEO of OFGEM, is paid ~£300k p.a. to regulate energy Co's. They are enriching their execs snf foreign corporate shareholders whilst we endure poverty inducing bills.  It appears he is failing, let him know what you think  jonathan.brearley@ofgem.gov.uk
 Literally everything that is happening now is a price that hard right Tories in Starmer's Party and the Tory Party were willing to pay to keep us on a right wing trajectory. The silence from government, the raising of CAPS without any consultation, debate or compromise. People will be sacrificing essentials for themselves or their children, and having lights on and hot food should not be a privilege.This is 21st century Britain, enough is enough! The nationalisation of ‘big energy’, which could mean clean energy generation and lower household fuel bills  to everyone, is long overdue.
The Tories don't care about whether poor people die, on the contrary, they welcome it. Saves money on benefits and the NHS.  Clears poorer neighbourhoods allowing for gentrification and conspicuous overspending. The moaning about energy prices will stop, as those who can't afford it will have gone.  They looked the other way as thousands of people died because of their austerity policies.  A study published in the BMJ linked austerity to 120,000 extra deaths in England (primarily a result of the reduction in nurses) Another study estimates 130,000 deaths.
A caring tory is as common as hen's teeth. Humanity means nothing unless it brings them money and they can make a profit our of someones misery   They are ruthless, smug and sanctimonious. who  have showed their total indifference to people dying given their endless rule-breaking by travelling (Cummings etc), partying (Johnson and half his cabinet), meeting up behind privacy gates (Carrie and every Tory **** with a country pile) during the Covid years.
People's patience has worn very thin now and it's about time.This is a national emergency. and our bloody government has a moral duty to act but does nothing apart from telling us to use less energy only a matter of days after insisting  people should not feel they should cut down after grim warnings about spiralling prices.A disgraceful disregard for people, Bastards is to kind a word for them .We need to freeze gas and electricity prices immediately. I lived through the poll tax riots when people protested against an unfair charge and won . and it's far more desperate times that we are facing now. I don't understand why more people aren't bloody furious  at what's happening to this country.
All I want at the end of the day is to send Truss, Sunak, Johnson and their supporters to Rwanda. Permanently. Doesn't seem a lot to ask? After all they've been raving about the place for months. 
In  the meantime a National Day of Action on October 1st has been declared with protests across Britain. Freeze profits not people. Join here:https://wesayenough.co.uk/