28 December 2008

Beware: The Danger Of The Fascists

Evening,

Looking on Sky News, and seeing protests springing up throughout the Arab World in the light of the latest airstrikes from Israeli fighter jets hitting Gaza, I was intrigued to find this piece on the Sky News website.  Apologies in advance, as it encouraged me to do a much further in-depth piece about Fascism in general, as it is one of my biggest passions, politically to make people see these bastards for what they truly are.

In the article that I have linked above, in essence, there are fears that the far-right not just in Britain, but throughout Europe could see an ever bigger presence from neo-fascist groups, and that this could all come to prominence at the forthcoming European Parliamentary elections in May.  Hungarian Guard: A bunch of fascist cunts

The warning comes, on the back on an increasing wave of racist violence and attacks on gypsy communities across Europe.  A far-right group called the Hungarian Guard, which has been accused of persecuting gypsies, says it will defy attempts to ban it, as governments become increasingly concerned at the rise of the right.

Of course, Hungary is one of the countries, which has been hit very hard by the current economical crisis that has swooped on the world in recent months, so much so that it had to go cap-in-hand to the international community recently, to get an emergency bail-out. 

In other countries in Eastern Europe, there have been reports that racist groups have been adopting more radicalised and twisted methods to get their demented message across.

Sova, a Russian hate-crime monitoring centre, says neo-Nazi gangs are now taking a leaf from Islamic extremists as they try to incite a 'holy racial war'.  Needless for me to say what that is.

Two migrant workers have been beheaded, al Qaeda style, in the last 18 months.  The most recent victim was Salakhetdin Azizov.  The 20-year-old market worker from Tajikistan was attacked as he walked home across a stretch of wasteland in South Moscow.

He was stabbed several times. His body was then dragged into nearby woodland where he was decapitated.  Authorities were subsequently alerted to the murder after an e-mail was sent to Sova. It contained a photograph of the severed head.

Although, the situation in this country is not as insane and militarised as it is in other parts of the continent, the continuing rise and rise of the B*P continues to be a cancer that needs to be rid of forever.

Looking back in history and conventional thought suggests that the B*P will benefit politically from a recession. Government ministers certainly seem to think so. Journalists think so. And the B*P themselves believe this to be the case.

And with good reason.

With unemployment likely to hit two million by the end of the year and house prices dropping 15% in the past 12 months, most people are feeling the pinch.  Labour's response to the downturn might have boosted its poll ratings in the short term but in reality it could be the far-right that benefits when the recession really bites.  As we have seen in recent days, the government's short lived bubble has burst, with the Conservatives back into an 7% lead at Christmas.

The belief of a far-right gain is supported by the Labour MP Jon Cruddas.

“I’ve got a sense of foreboding about what lies ahead,” “It will make a qualitative difference in terms of the context within which they’re allowed to perpetuate their scapegoating and myth-making.”

But let us be blunt, for one moment.  It isn't like this government is not helping itself nor its poll ratings when it is coming up with incendiary language like the stuff below said by the Immigration Minister, Phil Woolas, in a interview with the Times in October.

“It’s a national health service – it’s not an international health service,”

In the same interview the Minister said that immigration became an “extremely thorny” subject if people were losing their jobs.

“It’s been too easy to get into this country in the past and it’s going to get harder,”

Employers should, he believes, put British people first, or they will risk fuelling racism.

“In times of economic difficulties, racial stereotyping becomes stronger but also if you’ve got skills shortages you should, as a government, attempt to fill those skills shortages with your indigenous population.”

Woolas was careful to include all British people in his British first policy, highlighting the high levels of unemployment affecting the British Bangladeshi community. He claimed that it was all too easy for an employer to hire a migrant to fill a job rather than to retrain British people of all races.

While Woolas was actually addressing some tough issues, including many which have wrongly been ignored for too long, he left himself open to attack with a series of incendiary quotes which he should have known would cause offence.  By using the Norsefire-style language of British First, surely he knew that he was playing right into the dirty, little hands of the B*P.

Woolas has not been alone in raising difficult and controversial issues. Trevor Phillips, head of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, also weighed into the debate in October. Speaking ahead of an address to a CBI conference, Phillips said the following

“After forty years in which it was impolite to speak frankly about immigration policy, we now must be able to address this fundamental aspect of economic policy without embarrassment or without fear of being labelled closet racists or open-border fantasists.

“In what is to come, the best defence against prejudice against immigrants will be to make those who resent them competitive, to give them a place in society.

“We may need to do so with the sort of special measures we’ve previously targeted at ethnic minorities. But the name of the game today is to tackle inequality, not racial special pleading.”

As a respected member of the black community, these thoughts were not his first foray into this terrain. Previously he had stressed the importance of assertive action to help white working class communities through the economic crisis.

“What we are seeing is that there is a whole group of people, a large proportion of whom are white, who are going to suffer from this crisis who are going to be the people we should want to help, particularly because they come from the wrong side of town,”

“We are going to have to do something special for them. We are going to have to put extra resources where young people can’t compete with migrants’ skills.

“And in some parts of the country, it is clear that what defines disadvantage won’t be black or brown, it will be white. And we will have to take positive action to help some white groups, what we might call the white underclass.”

However, there is an alternative view regarding whether or not the far right will necessarily gain from an economic downturn.

“Although there tends to be a bit of moral panic about it, it’s never really happened in a way that, in any sense, threatens the domination of the political scene by the main parties,”

Those are the thoughts of Professor Colin Rallings, from Plymouth University.  He went on to stress that previous economic downturns had been accompanied by only short-term boosts for the right and were often geographically patchy.

Is the Professor right?  Will any boost for the far right be patchy and short-lived?  If we are to go on recent history then he might have a valid point.  The 1970s economic crisis failed to give any long-lasting boost to the National Front. In fact, if anything, the fortunes of the NF were already on the wane at the height of the crisis and certainly by the early 1980s, when unemployment topped three million and the bank base rate was in double figures and reached over 15%, the NF hardly existed.

During the recession of the early 1990s, and despite widespread media-fuelled concern over refugees, the BNP remained a largely inconsequential political force.

However, the concern within government and within the Anti-Fascist Movement in Britain and beyond is that there is reason to believe that events might be very different this time around. The country we live in today is very different from that of the late 1970s.  The Cold War overshadowed British and indeed world politics. Unlike now, there was a vibrant and most importantly respected Left in Britain as well as a strong and very active trade union movement. The Second World War was only 30 years in the past and its reverberations and consequences was still strong in public consciousness and Nationalism was a dirty word.

Since then the Soviet Union has collapsed and Europe fragmented. Nationalism has become the driving ideology of the past 20 years and Socialism and Social Democracy are experiencing an identity crisis of huge proportions. 

Here is a scary and worrying fact.

In the past year alone eight out of ten social democratic parties have been driven from power in Europe, partly to the benefit of the far right. Fascist and right-wing populist parties have been rising across western Europe and there is no reason to suggest that the same cannot happen in Britain.

Additionally, the B*P of today is quite different from the NF of the 1970s. The NF contested elections, but only in a half-hearted manner. For the NF leaders John Tyndall and Martin Webster elections were simply an organising tool but real power was going to be gained through control of the streets and by positioning themselves as ready to answer society’s call to restore social order.

By contrast, the B*P has understood some political realities. It has publicly dropped some of its hardline policies, such as compulsory repatriation, which it knew would not be accepted by the vast majority of the population, and it has turned to local politics. As a result the B*P is gearing itself as a real and lasting challenge to the main political parties, particularly Labour.

More importantly, the political terrain has changed. Disillusionment with the mainstream parties is at an all-time high, voting at an all-time low and active participation in political parties is, in too many communities, seemingly non-existent.

It is into this disillusionment that the B*P message is resonating. Race remains the cornerstone of B*P politics but its appeal is far wider and deeper. It is precisely because of this that the BNP could benefit enormously from an economic downturn.

As I have mentioned in previous posts, in Stoke-on-Trent the B*P believes it can take control of the council within two years. If there had been a mayoral contest next spring there were many, including some government ministers, who believed the B*P could win. At 6% of the local population the non-white community is tiny compared to many other towns and cities across the country. Immigration and race are not the causes of the city’s problems but simply the prism through which the B*P allows local people to understand their problems and anger.

The same is true for many other areas where the B*P is doing well. The former mining communities of Rotherham, Heanor and Nuneaton, three other areas of B*P success, have relatively small BME populations but deep-rooted structural economic problems.

Compare that to the NF of the 1970s, which drew the bulk of its support from towns and cities, such as Leicester and Bradford, which experienced the greatest influx of non-white immigrants.

There are two other issues that differentiate the present from the 1970s. The Cold War has been replaced by a world defined by the “war on terror” and just as a recession could boost the far right, so fundamentalist religious groups will prosper.

As unemployment rises and disillusionment with mainstream parties deepens, friction between new and old communities will grow. Winding this up will be the B*P and other fascist groups on one side and fundamentalist religious groups, bent on demonising other communities and religions, on the other. There is a symbiotic relationship between these extremes, with both needing the other to justify their own existence.

This could play out on the streets, as we saw so vividly in Oldham and Burnley in 2001, or through a rise in domestic terrorism. It is this fear that is gripping the Home Office. We are already beginning to see a rise in violent racism and this is only likely to accelerate as the economy nosedives.

There has also been a rise in terrorism in recent times. While every Muslim plot attracts massive media attention, less known has been the increase in attempted far-right terrorism, both in Britain and across the continent. In 2007, ten people were arrested in alleged rightwing plots in Britain. While all were stopped before they were executed, it does raise the likelihood that rightwing terrorism, be it by individuals or small groups, will continue to grow. One can only imagine the consequences of a fascist bombing campaign against Muslim targets in Britain.

Likewise, while the feel good factor following the decision to award London the Olympics probably helped to defuse a backlash against the London bombs of 2005, a similar bombing campaign amid an economic downturn might have a different outcome.

In the 1970s the trade unions played a crucial role in defeating the NF and today they have once again indicated their willingness to take a lead. But today’s world, particularly in the workplace, is very different from that of 30 years ago. The unions are weaker, more workplaces are un-unionised and also fragmented.

“The workplace is different from the 1970s,” says Paul Meszaros, secretary of Bradford Trades Council.  He continues:

“Back then workplaces were bigger and more unionised so it was more common for Asian and white people to work alongside each other. We were able to debate, argue and eventually find common ground.

“Today, workplaces are smaller and with communities living more separate lives and in different neighbourhoods within the city there are fewer opportunities for people to come together.”

Recession might be a gift to the B*P but whether it will exploit the opportunity remains to be seen. Despite its growing sophistication the B*P still struggles to win first-past-the-post elections. It has even performed poorly in recent by-elections, including some in traditional strongholds.

How opponents of the B*P react will also determine the potential electoral boost for the far right and this is where things need to change. The criticism of Woolas and Phillips has been strong and sometimes correct but it has also highlighted two fundamental issues. Firstly, a common unwillingness to debate difficult but very real issues and secondly an acknowledgement that progressives have partly contributed to the problem.

It is easy to criticise Woolas for his comments and of course some of his remarks echo the disastrous “British jobs for British workers” approach adopted by Gordon Brown last year. However, he was trying to grapple with some difficult issues, which all too many people prefer to ignore.

Likewise, Phillips’s call for preferential treatment for white working class communities has been met by a barrage of criticism.  Phillips is totally correct in saying that a growing number of white working class people feel ignored, abandoned and unrepresented.  It is this government which is allowing this resentment to fester as the B*P are feeding into this.

However, accepting the existence of these sub-groups and calling for preferential treatment is part of the problem in the first place. We no longer talk of a working class without sub-dividing it along racial lines. Playing identity politics is a very dangerous game and it is now coming back to haunt us. Too much government policy and spending, locally and nationally, is directed through the prism of race, which is unwittingly helping to create this “white” identity, which is in turn being exploited by the B*P. Too many progressive people who should have known better have been complicit in this, knowingly or unknowingly.

To prevent the B*P from exploiting our economic worries, class needs to replace race in popular discourse. We shouldn’t have white unemployed or black unemployed but just unemployed. We shouldn’t talk about white workers or black workers but just workers. That isn’t to say that we should ignore groups or not recognise particular hardships or discrimination, but we have to find a way to bring people along together, to get them to understand a common interest and shared future. If we don’t then how can we complain when communal groups, including the white working class, compete for scarce resources.

Similarly, there is the need to develop a more secular approach. One of the successes of the anti-fascist and anti-racist struggle in the late 1970s was its secularism. This was particularly found within the Asian Youth Movement, which brought together young Asian people of different religious backgrounds. While accepting the right to faith, there need be ways to bring people from different religious backgrounds together and this is no easy task. It is not just a question of differences between Christian and Muslim communities. In today’s Britain there is widespread suspicion and distrust between many religions, another issue that has too long been ignored.

We must bring more politics (with a small p) into anti-fascism.  However, just shouting 'Nazi,' at far-right groups and supporters like I have done for years is no longer sufficient.  As is calling for “Hope” over hate is also inadequate.  When people are struggling economically and perhaps see little hope around them, we need to be able to address some of the underlying issues that might make them susceptible to the B*P and answer directly racist myths. Hope is a positive concept but will only resonate when people feel good about the community in which they live and positive about their own economic future. 

We need to take the battle to the B*P on the same terms as they have done in recent years.

We must use their words, against them.

However, there is  also need to show fairness in our approach.  We need to demonstrate that we are fighting for everyone, regardless of colour of skin or religious background. We must also be prepared to criticise and condemn when it is necessary.

Wrong is wrong, from whichever angle or community it comes from.

Trade unions are in an excellent position to take on the B*P and its economic scapegoating, but it needs a different approach. Unions need to find a more direct way to engage with their members and their families than they do at present. A letter through the post or an article in a union journal is no substitute for a workplace meeting and human dialogue.

The road ahead will not be easy.  The recession will increase insecurity and so suspicion and hostility between communities. As the job market shrinks and local resources become increasingly scarce so racism and bitterness will grow.

The B*P could make huge advances in the next couple of years.

Whether it does will partly depend on how those who can influence the future – government, unions and anti-fascists and everyone else – respond.

Rob :)

Getting Back Into It.

Afternoon,

As I watched the Football results come in from across the country, I am pondering how I am going to get back into the exercise regime that I had been working under for the past eight months prior to Christmas, when I decided to give my body a rest.

However, with the festivities in my eyes, being well and truly out of the way (New Year Eve permitting, obviously) it is that time to get back on the treadmill and the weights.  I started this morning, leaving my place just before 9am and getting to the gym some half-hour later.  Did my usual weights, followed by 10 minutes on the treadmill, before getting back home about 11.15am. 

With Work Commitments the way they are, I am thinking of probably going to the gym before rather than after work this week, and with the gym closing for half-day on New Year's Eve, that does seem to be the best way to go about it this week, before reverting back to form, for when everyone else will be hitting the gym from January 5th!

Rob :)

27 December 2008

See The Wider Picture....

On a day when Gaza has suffered its worst bombardment in decades,  in which over 200 civilians have been killed, is it time for the world to ask itself several questions?  As I write tonight, Israel stands defiant in the face of mounting condemnation from the international community, and although we have seen the usual condemnation from America and Britain regarding the terrorists launching attacks into Israel in the first place, we have not seen similar words from other world leaders.

Let me get one thing straight from the very outset.  I support Israel's right to exist, unlike a lot of people on this side of the political spectrum who would not mind seeing Israel taken off the face of the earth, yet turn a blind eye to the homicidal bombers which come out of Ramallah and Gaza.  However, there must be an independent Palestine, that can co-exist with Israel, and it is important that the leader of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas has recognised that fact. 

The problem in this case, like it is in Iraq and Afghanistan, is the influence of outside forces.  More specifically, Iran, Syria and the U.S.  These three nations have almost, in my opinion have treated this conflict like a form of proxy war between the three of them for the past 40 odd years.

It is in the interests of these nations for the conflict to continue so that they are able to strut there stuff in front of the international community.

The Future Of This...

Evening, all.

Some slight changes into how this blog is going to done in the future.  I am now using Windows Live Writer to do my blogs, as it means that I can do them whilst the broadband is offline, which will mean more comprehensive blogs like the one below (on topic, there will probably be one on the inflaming situation in Gaza later). 

I am able to add video from media such as YouTube and Sky News, amongst others, extremely easily as Live Writer makes it ridiculously easy to do that! 

There will be hopefully more links to other related websites of relevance.  As more and more plugins get released, the content will get more and more richer in its quality.

But the rants will not change in its tone nor in its verocity.

That is a fucking guarantee!

Rob :)

A Thought To The Future...

Evening, all.

I was thinking last night about the coming year and what it would bring for me.  I am going to give my own thoughts over the coming next few days regarding the rest of the world, but for now I feel I need to give my hopes and ideas on what I hope will happen in my own personal and private life.

First things first, I have been back home with both my mother and my sister since February, when I had to move back home following the sudden and necessary departure of my housemate due to personal reasons, and at that time I did not have the sufficient funds to be able to maintain my own flat.  This, I hope is going to change with my job situation changing, as I am back in a position to affect how much I earn every month - in other words, commission. 

Kerching!

I am wanting to be able to move into my own place, (note, own place) towards the middle of the year, with several parts of Folkestone being looked at myself.  There is an particular flat which I am very interested in at the moment, which is rent-wise, pretty cheap for the part of town where it is situated - which is important, as I want to get an equilibrium between home and work, because like before, I will probably be going up and seeing my mother and sister on an extremely regular basis, almost everyday! 

However, there is the need, to have my own independence, which as much as my mother tries to disagree with, is extremely hard, if not impossible to have whilst I am residing at home.  For heaven sake, I am 26 years old and although there is a lot of young people my age who live on this estate who are still at home, I am extremely determined to get away from here.  Not because I do not want to be near my family. 

Far from it.  I just want to be away from the estate where I have had endured some pretty sickening taunting over the years.  Of course, it has subsided, almost completely but I do not want to have anything to do with the area, if I can have anything to do with it.

When I am walking up from work or after I have finished at the gym of an evening, I do feel threatened from the hordes of youngsters which trail the street corners up here.  I do not want to have worry about that anymore.  I just want to be able to worry about myself.  I have given up four years of my career, by living at home.  It is blindingly obvious to me that I will not get anywhere in my company, if I am seen as still living at my mother's, as sad as that is.  This needs to be done and that is the end of that.

Moving on to work prospects for the coming year.  As you have probably guessed, I have gone back to my previous job, however for security reasons on behalf of the company I cannot disclose what specific position it is that I work in.  As I said above it does involves earning commission, so the possibilities of how much I earn can vary from month to month. 

But it is not difficulty to presume that I would be earning over £1,000 per month after Tax and NI, when you take commission and overtime into consideration.  This will be great, however money consideration will only dominate my mind for a certain period of time, until essentially I get bored of it!

That is when it is going to time, to take a long, hard and careful look at where my career is going.  I have admitted in recent weeks, that I will probably have to take myself elsewhere within the sector that I work in currently, if I feel that I cannot get to where I want to be, for one reason or another.  I have expressed my displeasure on numerous occasions regarding the way that I was treated between the time I was told that my previous job was being dissolved and being told where there was vacancies. 

However, now is not the time for throwing the shit at those who fucked me over.  It is the time to knuckle down and care about number one. 

Me.

 

26 December 2008

Back To Reality...

Evening, all.

Folkestone Seafront at 08.04am on 26/12/08.  Lovely is it not!First things first, a picture that I would like to share with you all.  This picture was taken just after 8am this morning up on The Leas here in Folkestone, I just thought I would take this picture as a symbol that in these hard times that the world is going through, that there are some things of natural beauty. 

Meanwhile back on Planet Earth, the January Sales started in earnest this morning. In the case of myself, I was outside Debenhams here in Folkestone at 7am, to see if I could pick up any decent deals.  For the record, I did.  I was able to find this very nice Dolce & Gabbana watch reduced by 50%.  And it looks stunning, as you can see down below!

My New Watch.  Very Nice Isn't It!However, I did not pick up further deals.  I am the sort of person who is fussy what he gets himself in the January Sales.  If I want something and I know I can get it that extra bit cheaper then I will do.  I have also resorted to getting a pre-paid Debit Card that I can use online, as I also find that you can certain things, such as clothes that extra bit cheaper.  I intend to go onto one such retailer as soon as this blog is done tonight.

And the sales need to go very well, as sales for many retailers pre-Christmas were described as poor by The British Retail Consortium. 

Stephen Robertson, BRC director general, said: "We'll see the full December figures in a few weeks, but they won't be pretty. "Discounts and promotions on a scale unprecedented for the run-up to Christmas, combined with weak sales, have put margins under severe pressure. "The government must recognise that every extra tax and regulation has an impact on prices, under-pressure customers and retailers."

Research by PricewaterhouseCoopers suggested that 82% of high street retailers offered either sales or promotions in the run up to Christmas.

My sister prediction that we might see another chain as big as Woolworths going down the toilet might not be as far fetched as I thought.

What it will mean however is that shopaholics like myself will be in heaven this Sale Season.

Rob ;)

25 December 2008

RIP Harold Pinter...

Evening,

The sad news that has been announced this very afternoon is the sad passing of the Nobel Prize of Literature winner and anti-war activist, Harold Pinter who has succumbed to liver cancer at the age of 78. 

My generation from a political point of view, note him as one of the key protagonists behind the anti-war protests prior to the Iraq Debacle some years back, however older readers will know him better for such plays such as 'The Birthday Party' of which he not just wrote but acted in.  All in all his wrote a remarkable 29 plays, which seems staggering.

Going back to when he won the Nobel Prize of Literature in 2005, I recall his speech, where he absolutely tore George W.Bush and Tony Blair to shreds. 

Amongst those who have paid homage to Pinter  include veteran politician Tony Benn who said Pinter was a great figure on the political scene. "His death will leave a huge gap that will be felt by the whole political spectrum," he said.

One of the country's finest playwrights of any era, and his loss to the arts as well as the Political Left will be great.

Seasonal Greetings, Comrades!

Morning, and many happy returns for this season.

It seems that the Iranian President has decided to do his own Christmas Message. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was reportedly invited by Channel 4 to give his own alternative Christmas Message, which I find rather odd, for all the obvious reasons!

President Mahmūd Ahmadinejâd speaking at Columbia University on 24 September 2007

The Message, which will be on Channel 4 this evening at 7.15pm, unlike previous years when they would be shown at the same time as that other message will have English subtitles along with the President's native Farsi, is the first time that a foreign leader would have given a specific speech to Britain on Christmas Day.

He will be shown telling those who watch 'the general will of nations' is for a return to 'human values'.

Unless it is regarding Israel....Naturally.

Of course, some four hours beforehand, Queenie Lizzie would have given her pre-recorded message to her Commonwealth (see what I did there? - I know clever that!).


In the speech, leaked by her advisors - Her Majesty, states that this Christmas is going to a sombre time for many, those who have lost their jobs, who are struggling with their mortgages and loans. The inclination is that, she seems to pointing her finger at the 'Wanker Bankers' and retarded CEOs who did not seem to have seen the tsunami coming.

Talking about those who will be sombre this year, her comments come just hours after the body of a well-known financier was found in his New York office. A victim of the Bernard Madoff fraud scandal which has rocked the financial world - Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet was found at his desk with both wrists slashed.

Nice Christmas Present for the family, that.

At least there will be more Turkey for them...

Sadly, I do not think that will be the last similar case we will have before this Credit Crunch is done with...

23 December 2008

Cannot Wait Till This Is Done With...

Evening,

It does seem that Christmas is certainly going to be a muted affair in homes across the country and indeed beyond.  I have come to the simple conclusion that as my mother is working both Christmas Day and Boxing Day, that those two days are going to be nothing more than glorified holidays. 

I have long before now, come to the brutal conclusion that Christmas and to a lesser extent Easter have become like Football, a corporate beanfest, for when the rich cunts in the city, who have fucked over those who have lost everything, still get everything that they and their equally stuck-up brats want for Christmas.

And yet, this government, instead of giving billions back in Tax relief schemes to those families in desperate need, they give our hard-earned money to those incompetent cunts controlling our banks.

Chairman Brown has an awful lot to answer for this Christmas, in fact it seems that the 'Brown Bubble' has indeed burst, with the Tories going back into what seems like a comfortable 7% poll lead according to ComRes.

We had that chance. 

And I fear we have blown it.

22 December 2008

Cannot Get Into The Mood...Can You?

Evening, all.

I have had something bugging me these past few days which I feel is not getting as much airtime as it should be in the Media.

Are people actually not in the mood for Christmas, this year.  Because let me tell you something.  I am certainly not in the mood for it this year.  My mother, for one is working both Christmas Day and Boxing Day, more known in this house, as her Birthday, so there is that to think about, personally.

But I also get the feeling, more generally that with the Credit Crunch, truly beginning to hit the country in general, shown in recent weeks with the impending demise of Woolworths, that people are very fearful of the future.  It is all well and good for department stores and companies to be doing 70% Sale Offers, but if people do not know whether or not they are nopt going to have jobs in the upcoming weeks and months, then that money will not be leaving that wallet!

Which obviously means that others will follow Woolworths and fall into that trapdoor.

And the whole vicious cycle begins again....

And the whole point is, that with one company falling, the aftershocks will affect other, smaller companies and shops where trade will be lost.

Can you blame people for not being in the mood?

Rob :( 

15 December 2008

Can Things Get Worse?

Evening,

It seems that some of the World's biggest banks have been themselves burnt after burning their customers pockets for the past decade (Ha Ha!)

It all stems from reports from Yanksville where the former Chairman of the Nasdaq Exchange (I am not kidding), Bernard Madoff has been charged with fraud in what is being described as one of the biggest-ever such cases.

Well, I say big.  It is the biggest fraud case possibly ever.  Yes, even bigger than Enron.  And people did some serious time for that.

Such banking institutions such as Britain's HSBC and RBS, Spain's Santander which owns the UK High Street banks Abbey, Alliance & Leicester and Bradford & Bingley, as well France's BNP Paribas have reported as being stung by the fraud. 

Oh I do wonder, what they will do to recoup their ridiculous losses...

This comes on the day when the Pound has slumped to an even lower low against the Euro than it had done at the end of play last week.  The Pound touched a record low of 1.1084 euros, which made one euro worth 90.22p, before recovering slightly to 1.1196 euros.  Of course, this does not play well with tourists who pop over the Channel to get some cheap booze and fags.

And still it could get worse.  How, you ask?

If 2009 was to go sadistically wrong it would probably be because there was to be a run on a major currency or a Government bond market than because of wide scale corporate defaults. At this immediate second, the UK continues to remain the lowest hanging developed market fruit.

In other words, we are the least prepared nation in the developed world, to deal with this ongoing financial crisis.

As if we did not know that already...

Night, Night...

13 December 2008

The Art Of Spinning....

Evening,

I see that Chairman Brown has made an 'unheralded trip' to Afghanistan, on the same day that four Royal Marine Troopers are confirmed to have died whilst on patrol in Helmand Province.  Obviously, it goes without saying that my condolences goes to the family and friends to those soldiers lost fighting what they have been told is a just cause - and it was for about six weeks, and we've been there now for the past seven years on orders of Uncle Sam and God himself, so it seems.

Why was it 'unscheduled'?  Why should it be 'unscheduled'.  Really, someone not knowing the ins and outs of this would think that these deaths were arranged to make Chairman Brown's point that bit more pertinent, but obviously they were not.  Perhaps it is the past decade of ridiculous spinning that this government has indulged in, which has made me and others who are political thinkers that bit more distrustful of government in general - and the civil service by extension.  The politicisation of the civil service in itself is concerning, such as the media manipulation that A. Campbell indulged in, before it cost him, in the aftermath of the David Kelly Inquiry.

Surely, at a time where the country economic situation is getting grimmer and grimmer, now is the time for the spinning and general bullshit to stop.   I say this, after the Prime Minister was involved in a spin row after the chief of the statistics authority accused ministers of massaging knife crime figures for their own political purposes.  Such acts like these are not going to help us get Labour that historical fourth term in office.  In fact, if the government continues along this deeply concerning whim, then I predict that Labour will not just lose, but we would be reduced to a rump within this country - concentrated within the heartlands of Northern England, certain boroughs in London and the former minefields of South Wales, and that is if we are lucky.

It needs to stop and it needs to stop now.

12 December 2008

Off To The Circus!

Evening,

Just a quick message regarding my iteinary for tonight.  Tonight is the company's Christmas Party, which is based on a circus theme.  Which seems rather hilarious considering there is a percentage of people out there in the world which has some delusional phobia of Clowns!

The very thought of being scared of clowns is something that I cannot even comprehend.  In fact when I think about I crease up laughing!

Anyhow, each to their own.  I will be having an hilarious time with all the guys from work, and this will probably as is the case each year by a trip down the club for some further fun and games.

Speak tomorrow!

Rob :)

A Lump In The Throat....

Afternoon,

I was going to write about this earlier in the week, but thought I should give myself a few days to reflect upon it.

A few weeks ago, my mother noticed some form of growth on the left-hand side of my neck.  A lot of people would see that as a major issue of critical concern.  Not me!  I have had a cyst removed from my right arm earlier this yearn after much curious thought from myself into what on earth it was.  Though it was not without its painful moments.  Like having to have the local anaesthetic put into me not once or twice, and then having to have it redressed again a week later as the bandage was getting slightly loose!

Anyway back to the present, I thought it would be best to get to the doctors sharpish and indeed I was able to get an appointment with the quacks whilst I was off, which was rather good, as I had not had a day sick this annual year and wanted to continue this record!

Mother being the caring one, wanted to come up to the surgery and hold my hand, but I would not have any of that!  So off I went up to the doctors, extremely early Wednesday morning for a 8.50am appointment with one of the surgery's regulars.

I am not bothered whether or not I see my regular GP, purely because I rarely go there to really be concerned who I see.  I am one of the NHS' big supporters.  I find it amazing that in this 21st Century of private medical insurance or medicare as our cousins from across the ocean calls it, that the general population do not need to pay an extra penny for this level of healthcare.  There are people in this country of ours who try to drive the Health service down, but it has not done me or my family any harm at all - and is in my opinion, Britain's greatest achievement in the post-war era.

Prior to my appointment I was asked to fill in some form of questionnaire about the standard of service within the surgery, all in all, outstanding, but they do not have a box for that, so I have to just say excellent! 

I went upstairs, went into the Doctor's room, and explain what was the situation, joking beforehand, that I was not here about the tickly cough which had been in my system for the previous fortnight. 

He seemed immediately concerned with what I had said.  A lot more concerned than I thought would be the case.  Better be over-alarmist than not though.  In short he has referred me to an neck and head specialist, which is the norm in these sort of situations.

Oh well, seems like I am going to have another bloody operation!

11 December 2008

Governments Should Be Scared Of The People...

Afternoon,

Nobody can help but have been staggered by the horrendous scenes that have been coming out of Greece in recent days. The violence which broke out initially in Athens and subsequently spread throughout the country seems to have been boiling up for some considerable time and it has taken a act of Police Brutality (unsurprisingly) to light the proverbial touch-paper.

The basic facts of what has triggered this wave of violence seems to be this:

Just after 10pm on Saturday, two policemen patrolling in a central street by Exarchia Square, in the centre of the Greek Capital. They had a verbal argument with some young people who were there. During the argument, one of the cops pulled his gun and shot a 16-year-old guy twice. The victim was moved to Evangelismos Hospital to be found dead. From what eyewitnesses have reported, the cop had been swearing against the young man, showing his genitals, before shooting him.

Like so many disturbances before this, it only needs to take a small dispute to get out of hand and then before you know it the government is on the brink and are considering all sorts of measures. Indeed reports have come in overnight of smaller, but politically significant disturbances breaking out in other European Countries, with reports of sporadic violence as far away as Madrid and Moscow.Youngsters run to avoid tear gas thrown by riot police outside the Polytechnic University in Athens.

Personally, what is of more concern is the way that the Greek Prime Minister denounced those who have demonstrated and those who have rioted as 'Enemies of Democracy,'. Such terminology is worrying - just like Chairman Brown has tried to, and up to a point successfully done - opposition is not allowed.

This is the way Europe is going, where dissent is treated as subversive. You must agree with the government way of thinking or you are see as an extremist. Left or Right, Socialist or Conservative. If you do not agree with this government you might as well hibernate until the people have seen sense and have got rid of this government of the jackboot.

While the violence was triggered by the death of a 15-year old boy, the underlying motives of the protest obviously run far, far deeper. As always The Hard Left can mobilize demos because the youth unemployment is endemic and because the government is being forced by economic constraints to adopt a hair-shirt policy at a very bad moment. At some stage a major political party - perhaps PASOK - will start to reflect whether it can carry out its spending and economic revival plans under the constraints of a chronically over-valued currency (for Greek needs).

Supporters of a Bulgarian anarchist movement hold banners and light candles in front of the Greek embassy in SofiaThen there will be a problem.

Is it really much of a surprise that it is the Greeks who have kicked off first in this riot phase of this long politico-economic drama known as EMU has kicked off even though the post-bubble hangover has barely begun.

Saying that though, there has not been much civil disobedience in countries such as Spain, where they are a year or two ahead of Greece in the crisis cycle.

In the last few years looking in from the outside there have been an number of cities that have struck me as potential flashpoints - and indeed became powder kegs in the case of Rotterdam following the murder of Pim Fortyn, and Antwerp following the Muslim street riots.

Lille, Strasbourg, Marseilles, Amsterdam, Brussels seem inherently unstable, and it seems that the big cities of Spain and Italy are taking kindly to new immigrants - obviously we saw at first hand the riots in Bradford, Oldham and Burnley amongst others a few years back which was a result of growing disillusionment from White and Muslim youths, but thankfully we have not seen that level of violence in the UK.

Inevitably, the picture is going to get very ugly as the continent slides deeper into the shitter next year. The International Monetary Fund expects Spain's unemployment to reach 15pc. Astonishingly for a socialist government, Immigrants are already being paid to leave the country. Demonstrators hold a picture of Alexandros Grigoropoulos as they gather near the Greek Embassy in RomeThere will be riots in Spain too (there have been street skirmishes in Barcelona) - no doubt events will get ugly in Britain as well. People need someone to blame and as is tends to be the case, it is those in need or who are vulnerable who are targeted by the fascists who do not have a clue about economics.

More politically revealing still, the Guardian has warned not only of the impact of recession, but also the widening gulf between rich and poor in fuelling political and social unrest. It editorialised, "It would be one thing if everyone was suffering equally. But, of course, there are some people in Greece doing very well indeed, including those with connections to a government with a string of scandals, some of them financial, behind it...

"The more general lesson of these troubles is that unless governments are more attuned to the difficulties faced by their citizens, and particularly their younger citizens, they may well face similar but much worse times in the future, as the recession begins to bite. Greece's difficulties are not a product of the recession, the major impact of which is yet to come in that country. But that does not mean they are not a sort of model of what might happen elsewhere if governments go into the recession without a new emphasis on equality."

There is trouble ahead and it is going to have to take a coalition of Left groups and minorities groups to take this country away from the Federalist claws of the EU and its authoritarian dictators.

This country cannot afford to repeat the same mistakes of the 1980s and early 1990s and allow Thatcherite economics to take a hold.

The Greedy Bankers are going to have to be told in no uncertain terms that each penny of profit that they make, they must give back to the people, of which this government has given hundreds of billions of our money.

This is not a option, this is a necessity.

10 December 2008

Right To Choose

Morning,

Cannot help but feel a great deal of anger at the media today.

It should be the right of everyone to decide when to leave this planet, and not for the likes of the Daily Mail and their Christian FundaMentalist chums to make that decision for us.

Rob :(

Geolocate this post

Posted with LifeCast

9 December 2008

Some Quiet Time...

Afternoon!

I am currently on the landing floor outside my bedroom playing silly games with our gorgeous kitten Jaime. Jaime is around seven months old and it can be argued that she is relatively big for her age considering that she was the last one out of her mother's litter.

But oh god she is fucking amazing just to look at!

Posted with LifeCast

8 December 2008

And Then You Thought...

Morning,

Just a quick thought about the demostrators who justifably caused chaos at Stansted Airport this morning.

Good on them, and I'll argue that the majority of those who were caught up in the problems there would probably agree with those sentiments.

That if they were not waiting at the airport to get on their plane!!!

Rob :)

Geolocate this post

Posted with LifeCast

7 December 2008

Pondering The Week Ahead

Evening,

I have one of those all too rare weeks ahead of me, I have got it away from work!  I have never taken any time off work in December, so I am looking forward to having some long lay ins whilst the rest of humanity have to get into work in the freezing, Arctic cold as predicted by weather forecasters.  You can see what the weather is like down here in Folkestone, by looking on the left hand side of the blog via Weather Online (thanks!)

As for the cold, I still have that and it is getting more and more frustrating, particularly as it is now affecting the chest and the advise from all the quacks is that you should not go to the gym specifically if the cold is affecting your chest.  This is particularly the case, as I have a dormant form of Asthma, which has not affected me for years, yet from time to time such as now, has a tendency of rearing its ugly head when I really do not want it to!

I have decided that I will be continuing to go to the gym, but I am only going to be doing weights for the time being, as I only use the muscles around my limbs and back.  I believe that if I was to do anything such as Cardiovascular work then, the chest could come into play, which really would not be good for anyone!

As for my current size, I am wearing an extremely tight, yet gorgeous pair of jeans which contort around the hips.  I have had these for some three years and yet it is only now that I have been able to get into them!   I have also checked my weight these last few weeks and it has stabilized between 13st and 13 and a half stone.  I said to myself when I started this regime, that if I got to Christmas around that area, then that would be really good progress.  However, in my opinion I need to get down towards the 11st mark.  I have given myself till late April when I go to Alton Towers like I did last year.  Think that if I was to get towards that area then the circumstances going into that weekend could be substantially different to how they were this April just gone!

Back to now, and on Friday I have the company's Christmas Party to look forward.  The thinking is that hopefully the cold/cough/cattarh would have met its timely death by that point and I can go there and have a good time.  This will probably be followed by the usual gathering down Indigo with all those other revellers who have survived up till then.  I was wanting to go on some major bike-rides this week but sadly my bike has to have its brake-blocks repaired which is something that I cannot deal with, yet my sister can.  

But she is working this week, so she does not have enough time to deal with it.

Shame.

Rob :)

2 December 2008

Ode To Gym

Evening,

I am currently on the exercise bike at my local gym, sweating away like a dog. Whilst outside the weather is fucking freezing, in here it is somewhat warmer.

As for the cold, it seems to have spread to poor old Mother, so she will more than likely stay away from work tomorrow.

Speak more, as soon as I get my breath back!

Rob :(

Posted with LifeCast