Key Quotes

"Anyone who believes that exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist."
(Kenneth Boulding)




"Down these mean streets a man must go who is not himself mean, who is neither tarnished nor afraid. "

(Raymond Chandler)





"Live simply so that others can simply live." (unknown)





"I cannot live without books" (Thomas Jefferson)





"Sport is war without the shooting" (George Orwell)





"New York is a great city to live in if you can afford to get out of it" (William Rossa Cole)





The secret of a happy ending is knowing when to roll the credits (Patterson Hood)































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Sunday, 30 May 2010

Rain Stops Play

Our day at Lords resulted in us not watching a ball bowled. We arrived at "the home of cricket" at 10.25am and the rain had already started to fall as had the temperature. By 2pm we had given up all hope, and decided that if any play was going to be possible it would not make a pleasant viewing experience; regretfully we made our way back to the Underground station. The game did start later in the afternoon but the umpires ensured that it was a stop start experience before bad light finally brought the curtain down on an unsatisfactory day.

The era of new politics was shortlived, Secretary to the Treasury, David Laws resigned over his parliamentary expenses, and his claim for £40,000 rent money when he was living in the home of his partner. Laws, a millionaire, by the time he was thirty, hardly needed the cash. Another example that the prevailing culture,of "what in it for me" sucked in many MPs. Plenty of ministers lined up to call Laws, an honourable man who had wrestled with his decision. I'm not too sure he was that honourable, if he had been this story wouldn't have had legs.

Finally trivia, Britain finished last in the Eurovision Song Contest. Not sure whether this should be a moment of celebration. Of course the Europhobes will use it to claim that the rest of the continent hate us, and we'd be better off outside the EU. In truth it 's a competition for banal, trivial tunes sung by hyped up, glittery singers. While Britain chooses charisma free performers singing songs you couldn't sing in the shower there's little hope.

Saturday, 29 May 2010

Same old.......

Lib Dem minister to pay back £40,000 in expenses row, Cameron gives peerages to two large Conservative Party backers, former government ministers to become Lords including John Prescott, so what's changed the new politics appears to ape the old.

Meanwhile the Con Dem Govt refused to put up a spokesman for BBC's Question Time on Thursday evening, their logic was that the "Labour representative" was unelected spin-master Alastair Campbell. In a barbed release they stated that Campbell's presence was simply to aid him sell copies of his extended diaries due for imminent publication. The BBC of course guard their right to invite whoever they think will make an entertaining programme, with Campbell, Sky's Adam Bolton would have been an interesting selection. As for the government of course they have the right to decline, but of course the public have the right to regard them as fritt.

At the test match England moved past 500, no batsman failed but none other than Trott will be entirely happy with their showing. Bangladesh on the other hand had a bowler take a "fifer" at Lords and made a highly respectable reply before stumps.

On a personal note in my role as School Case Worker I had my first visit to another school to aid a member in negotiation, and I think matters will be resolved satisfactorily .At work it seems that next year I will get Monday's off but what's important is the spread of lessons over the other days.

Graham & Alex returned from Mexico and I was able to explain to Graham in person about Marmite's illness and death. The four of us went to Nirvana in the evening , a really good curry and excellent company.

Third night of disturbed sleep due to sinus problems, must admit the pain cast a shadow over the day. Ho-hum.

Friday, 28 May 2010

Green History

At 3.30pm on Thursday 27h May, Caroline Lucas made her "maiden speech" in the House of Commons. The first Green MP in Britain but also a voice for all those who are concerned with climate change and the environment in general.

The moment featured on the front page of The Independent , which is copied below:

A historic moment for anyone who cares about the environment

By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor

Friday, 28 May 2010

Caroline Lucas, leader of the Green Party. It is the first time in decades a new national party has taken a seat at Westminster

TERI PENGILLEY

Caroline Lucas, leader of the Green Party. It is the first time in decades a new national party has taken a seat at Westminster


History doesn't always come in thunderclaps or cheering crowds, and yesterday it was made with very little outward fuss when a woman in a pale blue trouser suit got to her feet from a green leather bench and began to speak.

It was precisely 3.30 in the afternoon, and the Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons, Hugh Bayley, had just issued a two-word invitation: "Caroline Lucas." And with that, the first MP of the Green Party, in fact the first MP of a new national party for many years, began her maiden speech and her party's political life at Westminster. Henceforth, the environment has its own representation in our politics.

It had been a long journey to get there, she said. Indeed it had: nearly 40 years from the Green Party's origins as the Ecology Party in the 1970s, and nearly 20 years in the case of Ms Lucas herself, who began her rise in the party at the moment of the Greens' false dawn: in the Euro elections of June 1989, when they got 15 per cent of the UK vote, burst on to the national political scene, and then blew it.

Thrust into the spotlight, such were the antics of the Greens' grassroots, rejecting the "cult of leadership" and insisting that the party spoke with several voices at once – I listened to the debates with an inward groan at Green Party conferences at places like Wolverhampton and Bridlington – that by the mid-1990s they had dissipated their credibility entirely and had become little better than a political joke. Caroline Lucas has led the way back to reality, and to the realisation of the truly noble aim of having a politics based on concern for the Earth, as much as on concern for equality, or freedom – the ideal of Petra Kelly of Germany's Die GrĂ¼nen, the charismatic inspiration for Green parties the world over.

I have followed her long journey closely over those two subsequent decades, and many key moments are etched on my mind. There was a midnight meeting in Oxford in 1992 with a troubled Petra Kelly herself, shortly before she was murdered by her partner; a 4am moment of euphoria in Winchester Town Hall in 1999 when Ms Lucas was elected as the Greens' first Euro MP; the moment in 2007 when she was adopted as candidate for Brighton Pavilion, the one parliamentary constituency where the Greens had a realistic chance of success; her winning of the fight for the party to have a single leader, in 2008, and then the securing of the post for herself; and finally the election night marvel at 5.45am in Brighton's conference centre on 7 May, when she and her supporters realised that they had broken through the wall into Westminster.

That was an unforgettable occasion of cheers and wild delight – in a weird way, it was like witnessing a baby being born – but somehow even that was eclipsed for me by yesterday's event, calm, composed and routine.

It was so routine, in fact, that I was the only observer in the Press Gallery, apart from two guys from Hansard, the official recorder of parliamentary debates, and a chap from the Press Association, the national news agency. There were 31 people in the public seats, and fewer than 50 MPs in the chamber. There was no roll of drums. There was no fanfare. But when this 49-year-old former Oxfam adviser got to her feet, I could not suppress my own sense of history being made; for here it was. It was real, after all, it was really happening: the voice of the environment was at last being heard in the Mother of Parliaments, long after it had resounded through every other national legislature in Europe.

You had to go back several decades, she said, to the election of the first Nationalist MPs in Scotland and Wales, to find the last maiden speech from a new national political party.

She went on: "And perhaps a better comparison would be those first Socialist and Independent Labour MPs, over a century ago, whose arrival was seen as a sign of coming revolution. When Keir Hardie made his maiden speech to this House, after winning the seat of West Ham South in 1892, there was an outcry, because instead of frock coat and top hat, he wore a tweed suit and a deerstalker... but what Keir Hardie stood for now seems much more mainstream: progressive taxation, votes for women, free schooling, pensions, and abolition of the House of Lords.

"And though the last of these is an urgent task still before us, the rest are now seen as essential to our society. What was once radical, even revolutionary, becomes understood, accepted and even cherished."

MPs in their maiden speeches traditionally sing the praises of their constituencies, and Ms Lucas followed Tom Greatrex, singing the praises of Rutherglen and Hamilton West, and Angie Bray, lauding the virtues of Ealing Central and Acton, in making sure the Commons knew the virtues of Brighton. In fact, the bohemian bit of the Sussex seaside resort, centred on the Pavilion constituency, is the Greens' spiritual home, and Ms Lucas hinted at this, remarking: "You have to work quite hard to be a 'local character' in Brighton" before going on to praise the Lanes, the Conference Centre, the Pier, the Royal Pavilion, the entrepreneurial spirit of the people, the beauty of the Sussex countryside, and the achievements of her predecessor, the Labour MP David Lepper.

But the markers she put down about her future activities constituted the meat of her speech. Climate change would be a major concern, she said, and she went on: "Politics needs to renew itself, and allow new ideas and visions to emerge. So I hope that if, and when other new political movements arise, they will not be excluded by the system of voting. Reform here, as in other areas, is long overdue." Electoral reform, she said, "means more than a referendum on the Alternative Vote: it means the choice of a genuinely proportional electoral system."

Furthermore, she told the House, one of the things a single MP could do was raise issues which could not be raised elsewhere, and despite the tradition of maiden speeches being non-controversial, she broached the issue of the commodities trading group Trafigura and the shipping of hazardous waste to Ivory Coast – an issue which was not being reported in Britain, she said. She added: "These are the kind of issues I would like to pursue."

The House of Commons has been warned.

Extracts from the maiden speech

Our message

"If our message had been heeded nearly 40 years ago, I like to think we would be much closer to the genuinely sustainable economy that we so urgently need, than we currently are today."

Climate change

"I have worked on the causes and consequences of climate change for most of my working life, first with Oxfam – for the effects of climate change are already affecting millions of people in poorer countries around the world – and then for 10 years in the European Parliament. But if we are to overcome this threat, then it is we in this chamber who must take the lead."

Single MPs

"Both before the election and afterwards, I have been asked the question: what can a single MP hope to achieve? I may not be alone in facing that question. And since arriving in this place, and thinking about the contribution other members have made over the years, I am sure that the answer is clear, that a single MP can achieve a great deal."



WHAT ELSE HAPPENED
Away from politics I managed to get tickets for Drive by Truckers gig in London in November, I missed them last time they toured as we were in Australia, they are the one new band that I've taken to in the last 5 years, who I really want to see. That said I also bought a ticket to see The National in December. Their first album Alligator was a real find, and although I didn't find Boxer as appealing their new album offers more and as I resisted the chance to see them in May (it was election night), I succumbed this time.

England v Bangladesh at Lords saw Jonathan Trott reestablished his test credentials with a double century, but many of the other batsmen gave their wickets away cheaply. Seems that we will be seeing Bangladesh bat on Saturday, although the weather forecast isn't favourable.

Finally the message came through that Marmite's ashes could be collected. So sad that he came home in a box. Elaine and I bought a shrub and Marmite's ashes will be put under it close to the patio in our garden.

Thursday, 27 May 2010

Bits and Pieces

A day when I thought I'd have time to read turned out to be the opposite. Mindless administration at work and acquiring information on my three on going union cases seemed to take up much of the day. Since April's Mid Essex AGM I've taken on the role of Secondary School caseworker Elaine thinks I should have delayed the take over till September, but I didn't. Cases now seems to come like buses in two and threes. Nearly thirty years ago I was Divisional Secretary of the Havering Association, so after a very extended break I'm getting involved again in trade union activity. How times have altered the role of trade unions in British society. The early 80s before the Miners Strike of 84-85 were years of optimism in spite of Thatcher's election victory in 1979. Today the Unions sem more marginal, yet as the last month has shown still vitally necessary to defend workers' rights in the workplace.

The morning paper reported that the Faces are going on tour. Back in 1970-71 they were the band, Rod Stewart lived the dream of music,booze, football and blondes. Rod went through a dodgy spell to say the least, but his popularity perhaps based on those ho remember him from 1971 still endures. A recent review explained that he coped well with the ballads but on he rockers he danced liked the middle aged uncle at a wedding. Anyway the Faces without Rod is like fish and chips without vinegar. Almost bizarrely Mick Hucknall has been lined up as the vocalist, frankly unthinkable and possibly unlistenable.

The other news is the fact that we have been offered two tickets for the test match at Lords on Saturday, at a knockdown price. Hopefully the weather will hold, there's nothing quite like test match cricket, and against Bangladesh, realistically only the weather should prevent an England victory. The tickets come from a contact of Mark's, my daughter's fiance, who works for Lloyds Bank. This caused some amusement at work, me being entertained by a group of bankers and the prospect of a dress code.

The on going transfer saga of Cesc Fabregas lurches on, today Cesc has talked about his respect for Arsene Wenger and that he will allow Arsene to determine whether he is sold. All rather unusual coming from a player allegedly seeking a move, but perhaps the admiration between the two is far deeper than the transfer gossip columns of the papers can handle. Cesc clearly wants to focus on Spain's world cup campaign, as far as Arsenal are concerned, we'll know once the Club starts advertising the new home shirt. If Cesc doesn't feature in the adverts then the writing is on the wall.

Wednesday, 26 May 2010

A day off

No work today, but neverthelss an opportunity to go to the allotment to strim, plant and water., and get out in the open air. Back home and the diging up a one scrub and the chance to make room for Marmite's ashes. We've decided that he should rest close to the patio as he was always happiest close to the house.

On the day of the Queens speech it was important to get an alternative view of the world. What better time to go to see Ridley Scott's "Robin Hood". A man who believed in taking from the rich to give to the poor. Russell Crowe has had mixed reviews for his portrayal, but he seemed convincing to me, although king john had too much of the Blackadder for my liking. Significantly the scenes of rural life in the early thirteenth century were not sanitised, and left no wondr in any doubt that life in medieval England was not pleasant or easy. Finally Maid Marian as a mature woman was far better than pairing the 40 something Crowe with a young actress. Altogether a very enjoyable film.

The evening spent watching the last episode of House (series 6). This series has been consistently excellent, the first episodes following House seeking psychiatric help was some of the finest Tv acting I've seen. The last episode carried with it a sting in the tail, and left one wondring whether what you'd just witnessed was for real or a drug induced fantasy. The box set is out in September and I've already got it on order.

Article of the day comes from The Independent
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/caroline-lucas-you-can-do-politics-without-selling-out-1981923.html

My reading of "when the lights went out" has reached just that stage. Heath and the "3 day week". Those were the days.

Tuesday, 25 May 2010

There's only one Phil Taylor !

Last night England played Mexico in an international friendly at Wembley. A couple of hundred yards away at Wembley Arena, because of an unscheduled delay caused by a power cut, the final of 2010 Premier League Darts took place. It takes a lot to draw my attention away from football, but the darts won the vote, and it didn't disappoint

Not known for understatement Sid Waddell called it the best darts match ever. The final saw last years winner take on 15 times world champion Phil Taylor in a first to ten leg contest. Taylor is a living legend, possibly Britain's most successful sportsman, so his victory 10-8 was widely predicted, however the fact that he achieved two 9 darts finishes and was going for a third and felt let down that it took him 10 darts ! A stunning achievement that resulted in him taking home the £125,000 first prize, and the trophy presented by Stephen Fry.

Meanwhile my look back on the 1970s has now led to me reading and reconsidering "the troubles" in Northern Ireland. I'm sure when people look back on the Blair years in many years time, the peace process will be seen as his greatest achievement in the same way that Iraq will be seen as his greatest indictment.

Monday, 24 May 2010

The Lost Weekend

There's a track by my favourite band, Richmond Fontaine, which starts off " I just can't stop thinking about Wilson Dunlap". On Saturday morning I knew what Willy Vlautin meant, from the moment I awoke the absense of Marmite hit me. Wherever I went I turned round expecting him to be there. The obvious solution was to leave the house, so this accounts for the most watered allotment in Ingatestone.

With Elaine in London at Caroline's "hen-day" I looked for tasks that required time but little thought I deleted and started to reinstall my itunes library, trying to be just a little more selective in order to trim the 3400 files. This is a job in progress.

On Saturday evening I focussed upon the Champions League Final. While in no way surprised by Inter's victory, I should own up to having underestimate Mourinho as a coach. On Saturday night, Inter scored, acceped that they would concede possession but restricted Bayern by defending as a team all over the pitch. Mourinho used his team's assets to his advantage and he commands great loyalty from his players. At Chelsea his utterings used to irritate and I felt he bought success, his triumphs at Inter suggest talents beyond the ability to spend. It seems he will go to Real Madrid next season, a challenge without doubt.

Slowly working my way through "When the lights went out" , a history of Britain in the 1970s.
Its strange reading about events that you've lived through as history. The chapter on the Heath government and their relations with the Trade Union movement especially the NUM seemed like another age. How Britain has changed in my lifetime.

In the days ahead we will learn more of where the CON DEM government are going to find £6billion, as the first installment of the cuts. The fact that the Queen's Speech was leaked to the Sunday Telegraph suggests that not all is well inside new politics. On Saturday the Green Party took a full page advertisement in the Independent urging people to join......