Fat cats and poor sods

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. 

2 September 2014

Where Plenty smiles – alas! she smiles for few,


And those who taste not, yet behold her store,


Are as the slaves that dig the golden ore,


The wealth around them makes them doubly poor.

 

Book 1, line 136 of The Village, a poem by George Crabbe (1754-1832)

It is a well-known economic fact – at least according to the ideology of neoliberalism – that the rich need carrots to get them out of bed in the morning while the poor need sticks.

Thus it is that in the today’s preter-Thatcherite UK economic free-for-all, bonuses for the fat cats are booming, while wages for hardworking families and singletons are plummeting.

According to a report by Julia Kollewe in the London Guardian on 30 August 2014, UK bonuses rose nearly 5% in the year to last April to reach £40.5 billion.

At 6 % of total pay, this is a higher proportion than at any time since the global banking system imploded in 2008.

Categories that benefited include bankers and insurers – no surprise there then – as well as mining and oil, all of them firmly anchored amid the uncaring professions in the privateering sector of the UK economy.

By contrast, public sector bonuses fell by 16.3%. Poor sods working in the caring professions of education, health and social work – predominantly in the public sector – received negligible bonuses.

Earlier figures reported by Phillip Inman in the same newspaper on 13 August 2014, show that wages fell by 0.2 per cent in the between April and June 2014, the first quarterly fall since 2009.

This is despite a pick-up in employment during the same quarter, April to June 2014, when the UK unemployment rate fell to 6.4 % from 6.8 % in the previous quarter.

This is somewhat paradoxical as you would expect wages to rise as more people earned an income through entering the labour market.

The explanation is the exponential growth, for want of employee jobs, in reluctant self-employment.

What has been happening on a large scale is that, because of redundancies and lack of employee posts, workers have been forced into self-employment, where they no longer figure in the unemployment statistics.

Great, you say, at least they have jobs.

Well, let’s not get too excited about that.

The latest official statistics show that workers who move from secure jobs as employees (often in the public sector) to insecure self-employment (by definition in the private sector) generally suffer a drop in wages (as well as a degradation in working conditions).

Writing in the Guardian on 21 August 2014, Angela Monaghan says that “Britain’s deepest postwar recession has led to record numbers of self-employed people, who are earning lower wages and working longer hours than other workers”.

According to recent figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), self-employment in the UK is at its highest level since records began almost 40 years ago. The proportion of the total workforce that is self-employed is 15 %, compared with 13 % in 2008 and 8.7 % in 1975.

According to the ONS, self-employed people have on average experienced a whacking 22 % fall in real pay since 2008/2009. They also work longer than employees – on average 40 hours per week as opposed to 38.

Monaghan quotes Frances O’Grady, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, the national institution representing Britain’s trade unions, as saying: “Self-employment appears to be a key factor in the UK economy’s shift towards low-paid work…The growth in self-employment is reducing people’s pay, job security and retirement income.”

O’Grady points out that while the average earnings of a self-employed person is less than half that of an employee, the self-employed earn no sick or holiday pay and have no employer to contribute to their pension.

Which helps to explain the paradox of why wages and unemployment are falling in tandem.

Clearly, as we suggested above, the poor need pay cuts to motivate them, the rich pay increases.

For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath.

Chapter 25, Verse 29 of the Gospel of St Matthew in the Authorized King James Version of 1611.

——–

 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. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)
  3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)
  4. Capitalism in practice (4 July 2012) 
  5. Ladder  (21 June 2012)
  6. A tale of two cities (1) (6 June 2012)
  7. A tale of two cities (2) (7 June 2012)
  8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

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

——-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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

Not very bright

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. 

1 September 2014

It is sometimes said that military intelligence is a contradiction in terms.

Now that may sound a bit harsh on the spooks.

However, consider an article by Matthew Weaver and Martin Chulov covering Islamic State (Isis) militants in Iraq and Syria, which appeared in the London Guardian on 27 August 2014.

One passage says:

“Isis has proved to be disciplined in its communications, with senior leaders completely avoiding telephones, emails, or anything that the most powerful signals intelligence networks in the world could intercept.”

Another:

“Up to 150 US intelligence operatives have been sent to Baghdad over the past nine months in response to the growing threat posed by Isis, Iraqi officials have told the Guardian. Almost all of the US operatives are connected to the National Security Agency (NSA) and have been tasked with monitoring phone calls and email traffic of jihadist networks.”

Antigone1984:

Could be a lesson in there somewhere.

Might go a little way to explaining why the doughboys spent nearly nine years – almost as long as the Trojan War – fighting insurgents in Iraq only to retreat with egg on their faces in December 2011, mission unaccomplished and the country mired in civil war.

——–

 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. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)
  3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)
  4. Capitalism in practice (4 July 2012) 
  5. Ladder  (21 June 2012)
  6. A tale of two cities (1) (6 June 2012)
  7. A tale of two cities (2) (7 June 2012)
  8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

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

——-

 

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

GAZA

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. 

22 August 2014

 

We have been asked to host the following article and linked petition submitted by Dave Bradney, a retired journalist and former Green Party activist, who lives in Wales.

 

OPEN THE GATES OF GAZA!

 

By Dave Bradney

 

I finally became disenchanted with the idea of Israel during 2006, when the Israeli “Defence” Force rolled into and over the southern half of Lebanon, wrecking and slaughtering for a month, killing 1200, wounding 4400 and displacing one million.

 

Before the Lebanon War there had been three previous Israeli “incursions” into Lebanon. The pretexts for all of which I will not bore you with.

 

From then on I could no longer see Israel as a plucky outpost of civilisation and democracy, of light, culture, talent and recovery from attempted genocide, situated precariously at the edge of a darkling plain. The people that I had imagined could never have done those things.

 

I began to wonder where that mirage had come from. I began to wonder what I had actually been looking at all this time. I began to do some reading – starting with the Balfour Declaration of 1917, through which Britain more or less offered Jewish activists parts of the Middle East which it did not own and at that point had not even taken by force. If you are not already familiar with all this stuff, please do inform yourself about it.

 

I began to read accounts of the mind-sets of the “founding fathers” of Israel – about their vision of a land in which they could build their state, a land which had no people or at least no proper people; about seeing indigenous Palestinians as “the stones of Judea”, that is to say as obstacles to be bulldozed out of the way.

 

Apparently, around 90% of Israelis support the recent/current “incursion” into Gaza, which at the time of writing has killed 2000, wounded 10,200 and displaced half a million (30% of the total Gazan population). This is the third Israeli “incursion” into Gaza since the start of 2008. Along with the West Bank, Gaza was supposed to have been self-governing since 1994. Israel claims to be affronted by the term “collective punishment”, yet – apparently – a vociferous minority of Israelis now supports the pro-war and potentially pro-genocide slogan: “There are no innocent civilians in Gaza”. Clearly there is a large degree of historical continuity between the actions of  Israel today and the views of its “founding fathers”.

 

Of course some of the Gazans are doing bad things. They dig “terror tunnels” into Israel, out of which commandos emerge to get mown down. They fire small, mainly locally-built, short-range rockets which are more or less unguided and do little damage. And yet, when you have stolen a family’s house and thrown them onto the street, just outside, assertions about your own future security and your right to defend yourself take on a rather hollow ring.

 

I began to stumble across disturbing ideas of my own. Writing an email to someone, I was surprised to find I had written: “They have become the thing that hurt them”. This is of course reminiscent of the phenomenon which psychiatrists refer to as “traumatic bonding”, in which victims of aggression subconsciously  decide to adopt the values of their aggressors, in order to feel less threatened. But that is a concept normally applied to individuals, not to whole nations and societies.

 

Later, in a slightly heated discussion on a blog, I came out with this: “I speculate (no more than that, but you show me a more believable speculation if you don’t like this one) that a long-term aim of the Israeli state is to push the Gazans back into the sea. Notice that this is what the Israelis accuse Iran of wanting to do to them. `He who smelt it dealt it’, as a friend of mine is wont to say …

 

“Notice that Gaza is conveniently laid out along the seaboard, and Israel’s 3km buffer zone, which it says civilians should leave, presses them towards the half of Gaza that is closest to the shore. Israel has stated that for now it is no longer interested in ceasefires [this position was later reversed, but may well be reinstated], and even when it has withdrawn its ground forces it can rely on the Palestinian rockets continuing, so it will continue to pound and smash, and will even escalate that on the grounds that it is still seeking to achieve deterrence. The Gazan health services are already at the point of collapse, and the conflict is too dangerous to allow in outside help, which in any case will be blockaded. So this will soon resemble a massacre, which some will begin to call a genocide. There will then be an international humanitarian initiative to evacuate the bleeding remnants of Gaza’s population (but where? Tunisia?) …

 

“And when the Palestinians have gone, forces of the Israeli state will enter and secure the empty wasteland and begin to transform it into the kind of sanitised consumer paradise which the Israeli people seem to like. With casinos, and an Iron Dome. Job done, till the next snag appears.”

 

I had not realised that I could envisage all that. Yet only a few days later I discovered that such ideas were already in currency in Israel. According to one commentator: “There is a persistent narrative promoted by Israeli newspaper columnists and politicians which should raise eyebrows in the West. They are calling for the dismantling of Gaza and the relocation of its people …” Admittedly this is a commentator well outside the bounds of mainstream opinion, but the piece seems coherent and well-referenced.

 

So, enough of this first-person self-indulgence, what should we expect to happen and how should we prepare to respond? As you will gather I do not expect good things to come from Israel, but I would caution against seeing the speculation above as inevitable. At best it is something to be carefully borne in mind, at worst it is rampant paranoia, but I think a balanced view would be that it needs to be seen as one of a range of alternative scenarios that Israel wishes to keep available as a mid- to long-term option.

 

Meanwhile, we have a Gazan population and infrastructure that are – once again – battered, bleeding and traumatised, while international opinion is now distracted by the crises in Iraq and the Ukraine. The health service infrastructure is deeply degraded and any sustained lack of power and clean water will encourage epidemic diseases. Homes and public facilities need to be rebuilt. The whole economy needs to be restarted. The United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has pledged that Gaza will be rebuilt again, but has added that this must be the last time.

 

Clearly the fullest practicable access to international aid and assistance must be provided, yet direct entry by sea and air is in the iron grip of the Israeli blockade, which began in 2007. An international airport built with $86m of aid was opened in 1998, was bombed by the Israeli “Defence” Forces in 2001, and has not reopened. Plans to build modern port facilities have been stalled for two decades.

 

Clearly the humanitarian opening of the gates of Gaza cannot be left to the Israeli state, which to all intents and purposes sees the Palestinians as its enemy. The UN has been calling repeatedly for an end to the blockade since 2008, and this is clearly the place to start in what will be a long process of wresting the political initiative out of Israeli hands. The collapse of the recent truce negotiations simply underlines that an intervention from the international community is essential and long overdue.

 

With the help of Avaaz.org I have just set up the petition “UN to run Gaza’s border controls (sea and air)”, which states: “With international agreement, the UN should gently but firmly take the Gaza blockade out of the hands of the Israelis so that it can itself operate a humanised version of the blockade, in place of the present Israeli restrictions. The UN would hold an international conference at which it would seek everyone’s agreement to take over the running of the blockade from the Israelis. The UN version would not be called a `blockade’, it could be referred to as `internationally mandated border controls’, or something similar. The USA would use its authority as Israel’s main source of financial aid to ensure its cooperation.”

 

For simplicity I have not included land borders in the petition objective, since land borders are subject to two-state control. Sea and air borders, on the other hand, lead directly out into international waters and international air-space, and so movement across them should ideally be unproblematical.

 

The text of the petition goes on to list possible advantages and benefits which could flow from such a handover:

 

  1. Humanitarian and human rights considerations would be built into the new border control regime, in a public and verifiable way. This would reassure the Palestinians.

 

  1. Israel’s legitimate security considerations would be built into the new border control regime, in a public and verifiable way. This would reassure the Israelis [Israel will need to be convincingly assured that weapons and other military equipment and supplies are not being imported. Provided this can be demonstrated it is difficult to see what legitimate objections Israel could make to this proposal].

 

  1. US involvement in the preparations for and implementation of this UN conference would be crucial, and would greatly improve the image of the US in the world [I am no fan of the US and its role in the world. It gives an annual $3bn in military aid to Israel, but I feel it is starting to sense that it gets very little back for that. Ideally for that amount of money you should be getting a strong regional proxy, but because of its regular “incursions” into other people’s territory Israel has achieved a near-pariah status that makes any constructive role on behalf of the US more or less impossible. An impression has been created that the tail is wagging the dog, and the US may feel that needs to be corrected].

 

  1. This handover initiative would greatly improve the image of the UN in the world. If this isn’t the kind of thing that the UN should be doing, what is? [Israel’s behaviour over the years, including the flouting of many UN resolutions, has been a continuing source of embarrassment and humiliation for the UN, contributing significantly to its reputation for ineffectuality. I would argue that there is already a mood of impatience about this within the UN secretariat and General Assembly, fuelling pressure for some practical successes and achievements. Assuming responsibility for Gaza’s border-control arrangements might well represent a reputational coup for the organisation].

 

Please would you consider adding your name to this petition, at and publicising it in any way that you can? Thank you for taking the time to consider this.

 

Dave Bradney, 22 August 2014

 

Links:

yvonne ridley

Gaza Petition

 

Antigone1984:

 

Readers interested in the Balfour Declaration of 1917 mentioned by Mr Bradney in his article might care to check out our own previous post Perfidious Albion published on 28 November 2012.

 

——–

 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. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)
  3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)
  4. Capitalism in practice (4 July 2012) 
  5. 5.Ladder  (21 June 2012)
  6. A tale of two cities (1) (6 June 2012)
  7. A tale of two cities (2) (7 June 2012)
  8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

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

——-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, Military, Palestine, Politics, UK, UN, USA, Wales | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ichabod

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. 

28 July 2014

 

TEN YEARS AGO

WE HAD

STEVE JOBS,

BOB HOPE

AND

 JOHNNY CASH.

NOW WE HAVE

NO JOBS,

NO HOPE

AND

NO CASH

Antigone1984:

Text of a slightly out-of-date poster seen last week in the window of Paul Baars Design Studio Store at Frederiksplein 16-18 in Amsterdam in the Netherlands.

For the benefit of those of you who don’t get out much,

Bob Hope was a comedian, singer and dancer, who was born in London, England, in 1903 and died at Los Angeles, California, in 2003;

Johnny Cash was a singer and songwriter, who was born at Kingsland, Arkansas, in 1932 and died at Nashville, Tennessee, in 2003; and

Steve Jobs, an entrepreneur who was born in 1955 at San Francisco, California, and died nearby at Palo Alto in 2011, co-founded the personal computer and smartphone company, Apple.

——–

 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. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)
  3. The shoddiest possible goods at the highest possible prices (2 Feb 2012)
  4. Capitalism in practice (4 July 2012) 
  5. Ladder (21 June 2012)
  6. A tale of two cities (1) (6 June 2012)
  7. A tale of two cities (2) (7 June 2012)
  8. Where’s the beef? Ontology and tinned meat (31 Jan 2012)

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

——-

Posted in Economics, Music, Netherlands, UK, USA | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Guns abroad, guns at home

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. 

31 May 2014

Two letters in the International New York Times yesterday 30 May 2014:

1. Times reader ‘Bruce’ from San Diego: “We have been the world’s cop for decades, spending the lifeblood of our young and billions of our money that could have gone to fixing our own problems. The problems we set out to solve are still there (Russia, Israel & Palestine, Asia) and we have raised a crop of new problems with people who now hate us…..”

2. Jay Saxena from San Francisco: “There has been one major terrorist attack on U.S.  and we have put in place security checks at airports, invaded two countries [Iraq and Afghanistan], killed Osama bin Laden and launched counterterrorist operations around the world, and spent billions to fight the threat. Since Columbine, there have been over 30 school and college shootings and we have done nothing. Gun violence is terrorism. The N.R.A. [National Rifle Association] should be banned and very, very strict gun ownership laws put in place.”

Antigone1984:

Telling it like it is.

Columbine refers to a massacre at Columbine High School in Jefferson County, Colorado, on 20 April 1999. For reasons unknown, two senior pupils, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, using guns and explosives, murdered 12 of their fellow students and a teacher as well as injuring 27 other people. They then committed suicide.

The major terrorist attack on the United States refers, of course, to the assault on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington on 11 September 2001. More than 3 000 people were killed.

——–

 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. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

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

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

  1. Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

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

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

——-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Afghanistan, Asia, Iraq, Israel, Palestine, Russia, USA | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ooops! Fat trains and ghost stations

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. 

22 May 2014

They say a camel is a horse designed by a committee.

We were reminded of this aperçu by the disclosure that rail bureaucrats in a major European country have ordered over 1 800 brand-new trains – at a reported cost of around 15 billion euros (about 20 billion US dollars) – that are too wide to enter railway stations.

It is particularly embarrassing for the country in question – the French Republic – since the cock-up has been revealed just as the elections to the European Parliament are taking place in 28 member states of the European Union, including France, between today 22 May, and next Sunday 25 May.

It may be thought that electors will take a dim view of national authorities who have dished out shedloads of taxpayers’ money so dumbly on dud rolling stock.

Not only that but the balls-up will be grist to the mill of candidates for political parties that are fighting the elections on a platform of opposition to ever closer economic and political union between the countries of Europe.

What other European country is now going to be willing to contemplate a joint cross-border venture – of the kind so beloved of the European Union elite hunkered down in its Brussels bunker – with the French rail authorities?

But we can look on the bright side.

Pessimists believe that the light at the end of the tunnel is the light of the oncoming train.

Not in France any longer.

The trains won’t even get into the tunnel to start with.

——–

 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. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

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

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

  1. Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

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

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

——-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Europe, France | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Urns for Europa

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. 

21 May 2014

The much-hyped non-event of the European Parliament elections is upon us again – yawn, yawn – and has stirred up the customary apathy.

Between tomorrow 22 May and Sunday 25 May those voters who can be bothered to turn out in the 28 states that make up the European Union (EU) will go to the urns to choose the 751 members of parliament that are supposed to represent them politically for the next five years.

Dream on.

We ourselves have written so much about the pointlessness of voting in so-called western democracies that we think it might be an idea to hand over the task to someone else.

And who better than Larry Elliott, a senior economics columnist on the London Guardian newspaper.

Telling it like it is in a cut-through-the-garbage article on Monday 19 May Elliott told his readers:

“It would be a mistake…to imagine that much, or indeed anything, will change as a result of the elections to the European Parliament. There will be a lot of talk about how Europe needs to deliver for its people, and that will be it. Mainstream parties with their mainstream thinking will still be in charge and life will go on as before.

It’s a text book case of “plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose”.

“As a result,” Elliott goes on, “Europe will condemn itself to an even longer period of economic stagnation, mass unemployment and austerity. Extremism will flourish.”

And so say all of us.

Elliott singles out the EU’s single currency – the notorious euro which supplanted the national currencies of 18 EU member states after it was introduced between 1999 and 2002 – as the union’s key policy failure.

“The euro has indeed been the economic disaster that some predicted when it was created at the end of the 1990s. There were warnings at the time that the single currency would prove to be a job-destroying machine. There were warnings too that many of the countries being yoked together were not ready for a one-size-fits-all monetary policy.

“It seemed glaringly obvious that…countries stripped of the power to conduct their own monetary policy would have to resort to austerity if they became uncompetitive. All this went unheeded. The euro, it was confidently predicted, would make Europe more prosperous and by doing so would create the conditions for ever closer [political] union.

“The reality has been slow growth, high unemployment, botched structural reform, drift and growing discontent. Problems have arisen not just on the periphery but at the core, where economic performance has deteriorated markedly since the creation of the single currency.”

He concludes: “Europe’s leaders consider the euro too big to fail. They are wrong. It is already failing. It is failing to deliver the promised economic prosperity and it is failing to bring Europe together politically. The euro is like the gold standard, but worse…”

Antigone1984:

Throughout this blog we have hammered home the point that the alternation in power of different political parties in so-called western democracies virtually never involves significant changes in policy since the nominally distinct parties have long abandoned any pretence that they are singing from different hymn-sheets.

In our Mission Statement at the start of the blog two and a half years ago, we said:

“The status quo will continue…the virtually invariable alternation in power of two parties with virtually identical policies means that no significant political change is possible in western societies. The political system has been deliberately designed to eliminate the possibility of change – while at the same time using spin doctors and advertising to give the totally fallacious impression that the alternation in power of differently named political parties does in fact represent change.  As we have said…, ‘if voting changed anything, it wouldn’t be allowed’.

And so, alas, it will be with the European Union elections this weekend.

As to the catastrophic introduction of the euro, we have long argued in favour of the adjustment of local interest rates and, where necessary, the devaluation of local currencies in countries – such as Greece, Ireland or Spain, to give current examples – which have lost their competititiveness. However, the fixed interest and exchange rates in the single currency euro-zone have removed these classic macroeconomic tools. The inevitable alternative has been the “internal devaluation” represented by crippling economic austerity.

Readers who want to consider these themes further might like to check out our blog on “Partitocracy v. Democracy” (see item 2 below) and have a look at our voluminous Europe archive at the side of this column.

——–

 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. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

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

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

  1. Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

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

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

——-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Economics, Europe, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Politics, Spain, UK | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

St George and tomato bread

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. 

23 April 2014

Today is the feast-day in the Christian calendar of mythical dragon-slayer St George.

St George is the patron saint of England.

Today, therefore, will be an occasion for the celebration of Englishness by English patriots. Roast beef and Yorkshire pudding, washed down with English ale, will be the staple at dinners eaten tonight by chauvinists throughout the land.

It is customary on such occasions to cite an oft-recited passage from Shakespeare’s Henry V (Act 3, Scene 1). In this passage, the king (referred to demotically as “Harry”) gives a pep talk to his troops as they prepare to fight the French:

Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more;

Or close the wall up with our English dead.

In peace there’s nothing so becomes a man

As modest stillness and humility:

But when the blast of war blows in our ears,

Then imitate the action of the tiger;

Stiffen the sinews, summon up the blood,

Disguise fair nature with hard-favour’d rage;

Then lend the eye a terrible aspect;

Let pry through the portage of the head

Like the brass cannon; let the brow o’erwhelm it

As fearfully as doth a galled rock

O’erhang and jutty his confounded base,

Swill’d with the wild and wasteful ocean.

Now set the teeth and stretch the nostril wide,

Hold hard the breath and bend up every spirit

To his full height. On, on, you noblest English.

Whose blood is fet from fathers of war-proof!

Fathers that, like so many Alexanders,

Have in these parts from morn till even fought

And sheathed their swords for lack of argument:

Dishonour not your mothers; now attest

That those whom you call’d fathers did beget you.

Be copy now to men of grosser blood,

And teach them how to war. And you, good yeoman,

Whose limbs were made in England, show us here

The mettle of your pasture; let us swear

That you are worth your breeding; which I doubt not;

For there is none of you so mean and base,

That hath not noble lustre in your eyes.

I see you stand like greyhounds in the slips,

Straining upon the start. The game’s afoot:

Follow your spirit, and upon this charge

Cry ‘God for Harry, England, and Saint George!’

However, England does not have a monopoly on St George.

Other nations too lay claim to his patronage.

Catalonia, for instance, the Spanish nation whose government is now actively seeking independence from Spain’s central Castilian government, to which it is subordinate.

However, today’s celebrations in Catalonia, one imagines, are more likely to involve “pan amb tomate” (bread with tomato) than Yorkshire pudding.

The United Kingdom is composed of three nations and part of another country: England, Scotland, Wales and six counties in the north of Ireland. Of these four entities, by far the most important is England.

However, this may be the last St George’s Day that the Kingdom dominated by England is so composed.

Because on 18 September this year the Scots – whose patron saint is not St George but St Andrew (feast day: 30 November) – will decide in a referendum whether they want to leave the United Kingdom and become an independent state.

Opinion polls suggest that this is unlikely but the odds are shortening as the date of the referendum approaches.

If the Scots do vote for independence, this will give a boost to separatist movements elsewhere in Europe, including Catalonia.

All this naturally poses a problem for St George.

The English, who have always been reluctant to relinquish their domination of subordinate countries, will look to St George to do what he can to retain Scotland within the United Kingdom.

The Catalonians, by contrast, will want the same saint to abet their move towards independence.

It’s no easy life being a saint!

Antigone1984:

Here at Antigone1984, for better or worse, we are not overly concerned with spiritual patronage.

However, in general we do support independence for small nations that seek to break out of the fetters of subordination to larger national groups. Small is beautiful.

Thus, we support independence for Scotland and for Catalonia. We also support independence for Spain’s Basque region and we think that Northern Ireland should be reunited with the rest of Ireland – from which it was artificially severed by the United Kingdom government in 1921.

For a less whimsical, if still partisan, reflection on this subject, readers might like to check out two of our earlier posts:

patriotism (1)

patriotism (2)

——–

 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. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

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

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

  1. Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

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

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

——-

 

 

 

 

Posted in Basque Country, Europe, France, Ireland, Scotland, Spain, UK, Wales | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Scoop! Hold the front page!

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 2014

SHOCK HORROR DOWN UNDER! ROYAL PARENTS “CARRY” BABY SON OFF PLANE!

Millions of viewers and listeners throughout the world allegedly tune in to the daily bulletins of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in the belief that they will get a well-researched and unbiased up-to-the-minute account of the most significant items of hot news that day.

Certainly there is no shortage of newsworthy events happening at the moment – the continuing turmoil in Ukraine, the collapse of the Palestinian-Israeli peace talks, the elections in India and Afghanistan, the 20the anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda, mounting repression by the US-backed military dictatorship in Egypt, and so on.

So it’s good to find that the BBC has its finger on the pulse of the world’s latest mega-story.

This morning the corporation’s world news home page had the following headline item emblazoned across it:

Duke and Duchess of Cambridge carry Prince George off plane at start of three-week tour of New Zealand and Australia.”

What were they expecting? That his parents would toss the eight-month-old future King down on to the tarmac?

Good to know that BBC standards are as reliable as ever when it comes to concocting schmaltzy tosh about the regular taxpayer-financed freebies enjoyed by unelected members of the Windsor family.

As we often say in these columns, you could not make it up.

We do feel sorry, however, for those millions of poor suckers around the world who are taken in by the charade that passes for BBC impartiality, independence and news sense.

——–

 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. Partitocracy v. Democracy (20 July 2012)

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

4. Capitalism in practice  (4 July 2012) 

  1. Ladder  (21 June 2012)

 6. A tale of two cities (1)  (6 June 2012)

 7. A tale of two cities (2)  (7 June 2012)

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

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

——-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Afghanistan, Australia, Egypt, India, Israel, New Zealand, Palestine, Politics, UK, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Hay Wrap

Antigone1984:

This nugget is performed by Irish rock band “The Saw Doctors”, which was formed in Tuam, County Galway, in 1986.

 

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