Football (2)

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

 

14 April 2012

“Some people think football is a matter of life and death…I can assure them it is much more than that.”

Bill Shankly (1914-1981). Scottish footballer and club manager.

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 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in Scotland | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Football (1)

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

 

13 April 2012

I spent a lot of money on booze, birds and fast cars. The rest I just squandered.”

George Best (1946-2005). Northern Ireland footballer and alcoholic. Played as a winger for Manchester United.

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 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in Economics, Ireland, UK | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Malcolm X

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

 12 April 2012

It’s the hinge that squeaks that gets the grease.

Malcolm X (1925-1965). US black Muslim radical. Assassinated.

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 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in USA | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Ultima Thule

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

 11 April 2012

WINDS OF CHANGE

The Shetland Islands – the northernmost part of Scotland and the Ultima Thule of Pliny and Tacitus – have fallen a prey to massive commercial development that will scar indelibly the unspoilt beauty of their rugged landscapes.

In the teeth of massive local opposition, the Scottish regional government has given the go-ahead for a massive network of 103 wind turbines with associated roads and ancillary structures.

Taking advantage of a site which regularly records the highest wind speeds in Europe, the pylon grid on the main island is expected to generate up to sixteen times the energy needed by the Shetland population of 22 000.

Most of this will be exported via an undersea cable to the Scottish mainland but some of the profits made will be pumped back into the local community. At present electricity on the islands is generated by a diesel-fuelled power plant.

The scheme attracted 2772 objections as opposed to 1115 comments in favour.  Opponents included the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, which warned that the project would damage crucial breeding sites for rare birds.

Antigone1984.com: While conscious of the energy arguments in favour of such developments, we are nevertheless generally opposed to on-land (as opposed to sea-based) wind power plants on the grounds that, at a stroke, they turn a natural milieu into an industrial man-made environment. Our views originated when we witnessed the degradation of the breath-taking natural landscape of the Sierra de Guadarrama northwest of Madrid in Spain as a result of the implantation of a jungle of wind pylons. A great deal of the rest of the Spanish landscape has been similarly affected as the commercial exploiters of wind technology have been given carte blanche to ruin the environment. Commercial development comes first, history, local sentiment and natural beauty a poor second.

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 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in Economics, Scotland, Spain | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Greed

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

 10 April 2012

[The cult of the science of] “economics has enthroned some of our most unattractive predispositions: material acquisitiveness, competition, gluttony, pride, selfishness, shortsightedness, and just plain greed.”

Hazel Henderson (b. 1933). Radical economist interested in ecology. The extract is from Creating Alternative Futures (1978).

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 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in Economics | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Galway shawl

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

 

9 April 2012

Easter Monday

THE GALWAY SHAWL

Lyrics below.

For the music, try the Fred Jorgensen version at:

http://www.wtv-zone.com/phyrst/audio/nfld/05/galway.htm

This is not immediately classifiable as a political post. But, thanum an dial, today’s a holiday after all. That said, the song evokes the lost golden age of a pre-Homeric peasant community untainted by modernisation and immune to the evils of progress – a mythical Ireland that de Valera tried, and failed, to magic up out of the mists of Celtic legend.

More’s the pity.

At Oranmore in the county Galway,
 One pleasant evening in the month of May;
 I spied a damsel, she was young and handsome,
 Her beauty fairly took my breath away.

She wore no jewels, nor costly diamonds,
 No paint nor powder, no, none at all;
 She wore a bonnet with ribbons on it,
 And around her shoulder was the Galway shawl.

We kept on walking, she kept on talking,
Till her father’s cottage came into view; She said: “Come in, sir, and meet me father,
 And play to please him, The Foggy Dew.”

She sat me down beside the hearthstone,
 I could see her father, he was six feet tall;
 And soon her mother had the kettle singing,
 All I could think of was the Galway shawl.

She wore no jewels nor costly diamonds, No paint nor powder, no, none at all;
 She wore a bonnet with ribbons on it,
 And around her shoulder was the Galway shawl.

I played The Black Bird, The Stack of Barley,
 Rodney’s Glory and The Foggy Dew; 
She sang each note like an Irish linnet,
 And tears welled in her eyes of blue.

‘Twas early, early all in the morning,
 I hit the road for old Donegal; 
She said, “Goodbye, sir.” She cried and kissed me,
 But my heart remains with the Galway shawl.

She wore no jewels, nor costly diamonds,
 No paint nor powder, no, none at all;
 She wore a bonnet with ribbons on it,
 And around her shoulder was the Galway shawl.
 And around her shoulder was the Galway shawl.

 ————–

 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in Ireland | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Urbi et Orbi

8 April 2012

Easter Sunday

URBI ET ORBI

In terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis

Romae. In sua oratione pascuali hodie pro multitudine centum milium fidelium, in foro Vaticano, Papa Benedictus XVI incitavit pacem in terra atque finem caedis, praecipue in Syria.

Dum autem orationem habebat Papa, dictator Syriae, Bashar al-Assad, oppugnabat adversarios: fere septuaginta homines (dicitur) necavit.

Heri vesperi, inter missam pascualem in templo Sancti Petri, mentionem fecit Papa tenebrarum quae impendent generi humano: homines res corporeas, quae cerni tangique possunt, facile vident,  facile indagunt, sed quo vadit orbis terrarum aut unde venit, quo vadit vita nostra, quid bonum est, quid malum, haudquaquam videre possunt.

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 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in Italy, Military, Religion, Syria | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Not a dinner party

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

 7 April 2012

 

革命不是請客吃飯, 不是做文章, 不是繪畫繡花,不能那樣雅致, 那樣從容不迫, 文質彬彬, 那樣溫良恭儉讓。革命是暴動, 是一個階級推翻一個階級的暴烈的行動。

《湖南農民運動考察報告》 一九二七年三月

《毛澤東選集》第一卷第一八頁

 

A revolution is not a dinner party, or writing an essay, or painting a picture, or doing embroidery; it cannot be so refined, so leisurely and gentle, so temperate, kind, courteous, restrained and magnanimous. A revolution is an insurrection, an act of violence by which one class overthrows another.

“Report on an Investigation of the Peasant Movement in Hunan” (March 1927), Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung, Vol. I, p. 28.

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You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in China, Politics, Revolution | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Jaw-jaw

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

 6 April 2012

To jaw-jaw is always better than to war-war.

Winston Churchill (1874-1965), Tory politician, UK Prime Minister in war (1940-1945) and peace (1951-1955). The quotation is from a speech he gave at the White House in Washington on 26 June 1954.

Clearly, the message has still to get through to the Americans.

Take Pakistan.

There’s trouble up the Khyber.

Unruly tribes, ethnic factions, religious fundamentalists, Taliban, Kashmir freedom fighters, rebel warlords, village militias, al-Qa’ida – a patchwork of localised turbulence outside central government control.

The Pakistani Government wants to end the resulting internecine strife by talking to the dissidents.

The Americans, by contrast, want to bomb them.  Using pilotless drones. The fact that Pakistan is an independent country, a Member State of the United Nations, with its own borders and government does not seem to bother them.

Only it bothers the Pakistanis.

Which is why they have stopped the Americans funnelling supplies for the Afghan war through Pakistan.

Today’s Le Monde headlines an article on this subject “Pakistan rejects the fight against terrorism advocated by the United States”.

The newspaper says that the Pakistani Government wants an end to attacks by US drones on its territory, “a demand considered unacceptable by the United States”.

One wonders how the United States would react to a drone attack by Pakistan on Pennsylvania. Anyone remember 9/11 ?

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 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in Military, Pakistan, Politics, UK, USA | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Kafka

Editorial note: If you have not yet read our mission statement above, please do so in order that you can put our blogs in context. 

5 April 2012

CONCEALING TORTURE

In a draconian crackdown on civil liberties redolent of the totalitarian regimes of North Korea or China, the UK Government has launched a blitzkrieg against immemorial rights and freedoms with a raft of kafkaesque proposals for secret police surveillance of all private internet communications together with the establishment of secret courts to prevent evidence of crimes by the state, particularly its involvement in torture, from seeping into the public domain.

This from a Government Coalition of Tories and Liberal Democrats who, on coming to office in 2010, had pledged “to restore the rights of individuals in the face of encroaching state power”.

Civil rights defenders, members of both Houses of Parliament, press editorialists and media pundits have predicted all-out resistance to the crackdown.

No laggard in its condemnation of the proposed encroachments was today’s leader in the centre-right Guardian newspaper, which boasts of its liberal radicalism while simultaneously professing an unwavering allegiance to the free market economics of 19 C Manchester.

However, Antigone1984 sensed a strangely jarring note within the editorial’s generally negative critique of the Government proposals when it spoke approvingly of “the normal – and proper – readiness of the courts and of parliament to accept the word of the government on national security issues”.

Given that governments are only too ready to lie, deceive, falsify, exaggerate, hoodwink, downplay, prevaricate, misinform, equivocate,  fudge, dissimulate, stall, distort and spin-doctor in all other aspects of political life without exception, why on earth should their word be accepted when it comes to national security?

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 You might perhaps care to view some of our earlier posts.  For instance:

 1. Why? or How? That is the question (3 Jan 2012)

2. Das Vierte Reich/The Fourth Reich (6 Feb 2012)

3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)

4. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

5. What would Gandhi have said? (30 Jan 2012)

Every so often we shall change this sample of previously published posts.

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Posted in China, Justice, Korea, Media, Torture, UK | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment