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January 2007

Blair planning something?

16

January

I recently discovered that my (soon to be former) MP has a blog, on MySpace. It’s actually not awful, for a MySpace blog, but today, he’s speculating Blair Resigns? :

something is definitely in the air. I don’t know what it is, but if Blair announces his resignation by the end of this week, you read it here first.

So the Westminster bubble says something is up. It would, of course, be a good thing for him to go. Here’s just hoping the constitutionally illiterate morons don’t make much running with getting Brown to got for an early election, we need to give the man time to mess things up utterly.


National Databases: A vision of madness

15

January

Ian Parker, a writer new to me, has an excellent story on the dangers of the database state that ends with:

In a free society, the rights and laws protect the individual from the government. In a dictatorship, the rights and laws protect the government from the people.

So very true. We’ve written at length here in the past about the dangers of the National Identity Register, but as Ian says:

I can hear Mr Blair protesting now that this is not what all these laws are for, but Mr Blair, please understand, THIS IS HOW THEY WILL BE APPLIED, if not in a dictatorial regime, certainly one in which it is very easy to hit all your targets when the laws are all on your side.

(via)


300 years of Great Britain

11

January

I am reminded that this year will mark the 300th anniversary of the Act of Union that created Great Britain. There are those that would like it to also be the last, a subject I’ve written about extensively in the past. Indeed this desire seems to be spreading both North and South of the border:

devolution was supposed to defeat nationalism. That was what George Robertson, the former chief of Nato, famously said would happen: devolution would kill nationalism ’stone dead’. Not so. For England increasingly feels the intrinsic unfairness of devolution. Now John Reid, a Scottish Home Secretary, presides over a department that has limited powers in his own constituency of Airdrie and Shotts. Soon Gordon Brown will move into 10 Downing Street, to make laws on health and education that have no play in North Queensferry, where he lives. Meanwhile, a nation ashamed of the Iraq war tries to shake off culpability by turning to the SNP.

Me? Well, I still stand by the words I wrote in my very first post at teh old site, now to be found here:

Great Britain was founded in 1707, nearly three hundred years ago. The anniversary approaches. Are we doing anything about it? Let’s be proud to be British, and remember that we are also English, Welsh, Scottish or whatever. Let us look to the future and be proud of our heritage, not look to the past and try to bolt the doors.

I’d like to celebrate the foundation of this great nation. Look to the future, a liberal, tolerant, open minded society that truly does live and let live.

Given that this useless Government appears to be doing and planning absolutely nothing, anyone got any ideas?


Mass Lone protest

10

January

Via D-Notice I see that this afternoon is another registration day for one of Mark ThomasMass Lone Protests, forms to be handed in at the Police Station on Agar Street, just up from Charing Cross station. As I’m in London (flat, then job, hunting), might as well register my presence.

If anyone else cares to join us, I’ll probably be in a pub for a bit afterwards as well (no idea which pub, naturally, I’m not, yet, a Londoner)…


Halliday on the worlds worst ideas

09

January

Professon Fred Halliday has written an analysis of what he believes to be the twelve worst ideas in international discourse. On some of his points, I agee completely, on others, he is completely off base. I seem to recall thinking that when I studied his theories properly, but that was a few years ago now. (more…)


Europe: A vision of the future?

08

January

Written a lot about Europe in the past, I think I’ve found and tagged most of the old posts but have probably missed hundreds. One of the subjectst that comes up time and again is that, while I don’t like the EU as it currently stands, I like it more than the current alternatives, and truly believe it can be reformed and improved. I share this view with James Clive Matthews, who has written an excellent post on the need to take the long view and broken down his philosophy on Europe and Britain’s involvement:

10) Most individual nations are simply too damned small to have much chance of surviving on their own in the long term. Throughout history, the general trend has been for states to grow larger and larger, until some kind of limit (either geographical or geopolitical) is reached, because the larger the area you cover, the more versatile your production and the more self-sufficient you can be. - This is my primary reason for being pro-EU: I simply cannot see how a country as small as the UK (or, indeed, any European country) can survive on its own in the longer-term. Just as I see national identity being formed largely from negatives, so too is my pro-EU stance.

This is, largely, my primary reason for support as well, Britain gave up the Empire before my father was born, and joined Europe before I was born. (more…)


New year, new writers, new look?

04

January

Well, I guess it’s about time to try to end the hiatus here. I’ve personally been busy wrapping up at my old job and enjoying a break, but while I’m still ‘between jobs’ as they say, and moving to London soon, that’s no reason to not do stuff here.

Anyway, I’m hoping to invite a few more writers on board over the next few weeks and months, and get back to a few that expressed an interest before. The first new writer is already on board; John Franglen is another friend from University I’ve kept in touch with, studied economics, and is now studying design; he wrote a peace for his journal that tied in with a few of my thoughts on a popular issue, so I asked if he’s like to re-publish it here, a nice little explanation about why hypothecated taxes are, generally, a bad idea.

I plan to update the look of this place (I’ve been learning Wordpress theming) as well, but that’s a medium term goal, and also install a few plugins to support OpenID login and thus authors from other sites writing here without registering, which will be nice. In the meantime, if anyone would like to write the occasional peace, comment here or email; contact address is currently on the About page…


Hypothecation - not a hypothesis on vacation, but about as much use

04

January

My first post on here is something that I’d been planning to write about on my livejournal for a while, but it took me a while (11 months actually) to get around to. The thing that spurred me to actually getting around to write it was someone saying something along the lines of the following:

I wouldn’t mind so much about speed cameras if the fines went towards road safety

And what he’s after is what economists call hypothecation. The problem is, while it might sound good, it’s really quite a bad idea
(more…)


"The penalty that good men pay for not being interested in politics is to be governed by men worse than themselves."
-PLATO (427-347BCE)
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