You are in the company of Roger Warren Evans, Welsh socialist lawyer and company director, on a journey to work out a new socialist order capable of generating equality and freedom for the world.  Nothing less will do.
   

 

 

 

 
 



New
Living Diary
Index


Renewing participatory democracy

"Tame the Corporations!"

My Little Red Book

A New Socialist Settlement

Globalise the Left!

Bevan
Re-visited
 

Multiple Differential Uncertainty


Who am I? Biography 

 

     


0104  Make sure you have not missed the previous edition of LivePolitics  Check it out  
And the one before that?   
Other recent topics highlighted here

Week 06
Sunday 9 February
2003


Stop the War Coalition  
London Saturday 15 February 2003

You have given me a lot of stick, this week, for my criticism of the role of the Socialist Workers Party and the revolutionary Left, as the principal organisers of the Stop the War Coalition.  I had decided - you may recall - to carry on with my long-laid plans for the first-ever Fabian Conference in North Wales on Saturday 15 February - and that meant missing the London March.  Last September,
I marched with gusto although (I freely admit) distinctly discomforted by the aggression and disruptive conduct of the revolutionary Left.

And I came to the conclusion that I had been wrong.  The cause is of far greater importance than my personal distaste for the extreme Left.  So I cancelled the Fabian Conference, deferred to 17 May.  I shall be marching in London, again. 

  • Join us.

172 Heroes...

172 is a number to conjure with.  For my part, I was not at all disappointed by the outcome of the chaotic Parliamentary debate, this week, on Lords Reform.  Faced with the "official seven Options", Speaker Martin accepted a last-minute Amendment calling for the outright abolition of the Lords.  And then - fantastic! - no fewer than 172 MPs voted in favour of Option 8 - namely total abolition of our Second Chamber, our peculiarly English pantomime called "The Lords". Check out whether your own MP is on this Roll of Honour.  The only real democratic solution is to re-structure the Commons, and vest full legislative authority in our 653 democratically elected MPs.


Network De-Railed

The cataclysmic Network Rail cuts will come as no surprise to my readers.  It's all going according to forecast - my forecast, that is.

I have been advising the Government for a long, long time (see January 2002) to do a Beeching on the rail network. We must act decisively, to bring our love affair with rail to an end. 


Old Dogs, New Tricks

Socialists must re-learn the limits of State power.  And we must propose a new international socialist order - nothing less will do.
In seeking to reduce inequalities, our primary focus should be on -

  • education
  • unemployment relief
  • state pensions
  • the underlying equality agenda of the human rights movement. 
  • And in all those sectors,
    there is a great deal to be done.

Good Sense from Sterling

The Local Government Chronicle is regular reading for me.  And it is tragic to sense the despair and demoralisation of both Councillors and officers, throughout the UK.  Scotland and Wales are no exception.  In confronting the Government's new absurd Americanism (Business Improvement Districts, for our city centres) the hapless Labour LGA Leader Sir Jeremy Beecham said pessimistically -

  • "We must ensure that the BID process involves the wider community, and enhances existing Council services, rather than replacing them..."

And in the same edition the energetic Chief Executive of Sterling Council Keith Yates bemoaned the emasculation of city government, throughout the UK - read his attack.


Green Belt Re-visited

This week, John Prescott is due to unveil plans to address the disastrous shortage of new housing in the South West.  After six years of shilly-shallying, Labour cannot postpone for much longer the moment of decision (see May 2002...)  He must draw himself up to his full socialist height and confront the self-serving middle-class shibboleth known as the Green Belt...


Other recent topics

  • Funding political parties >>>
  • International Concordat needed >>>
  • Why use prisons at all? >>>
  • Are we too litigious? >>>
  • London, Incapable City >>>
  • Letwin, Tory Leader? >>>
  • Me v Safeway >>>
  • Parish Pump Dissent >>>
  • Lords must go! >>>
  • Corporate corruption is legal >>>
  • Socialism inspires liberalism >>>
  • Salariat v. Proletariat >>>
  • My Grandad, Prizefighter >>>
  • Rejecting American values >>>
  • Blair's too old-fashioned for me >>>
  • The "Bomb Iraq" Song >>>

And read my own Big Theory itself, at
Multiple Differential Uncertainty   
   back to top

 

      An end to Old America

I am an optimist.  I believe that the "Iraq Incident" will, whatever happens, mark the death-throes of Old America. 


Rowan's not wrong...

...but the new Archbishop of Canterbury has not been very constructive either.   If it were practicable, many refugee groups would, like him, favour an initial period of "induction", during which newcomers could be "shown the ropes" of UK life.  And that would give the Authorities an opportunity to check out security risks. But with reception rates running at 250 per day, it is clearly not practicable - as Labour firmly observed, when in Opposition.  And the practicalities matter. 

So the new Archbishop showed himself a little lacking in worldly wisdom, in his first attempt to redress the balance of his perceived "bearded Leftie" image.  Next time, he must try harder to get the emphasis right.



Wise Balance

Policy is still evolving, in the difficult civil rights sector of sperm donation and its consequences. Although a wide range of genetic data will be made available to sperm-donor children, Alan Milburn continues to consult on the release of full details of personal identity. This debate is moving in the right direction.

  • Legislation will apply only to future sperm donations, and will not be retrospective. Provided that that donors are protected against any threat of legal liability (maintenance, or any other form of civil liability), the conflicting civil rights priorities would be wisely reconciled

Identity Cards  
wrong time to legislate

Cabinet momentum is building, for the introduction of ID cards. But the project is misconceived.  There is no evidence that the continental countries, with their long-standing and oppressive ID-card systems, are faring any better than we are in the "fight against terrorism" or the management of migration.  Labour should have the wisdom to hold its hand.


Let Judges decide

I am dismayed by the current euthanasia debate, triggered by the enabled suicide in Switzerland of Howard Crew.  Why should this issue not be decided by a Judge? 

Jurisdiction could be given to a High Court judge to visit and interview each person requesting the "right to die".  The High Court already has to intervene in disputed matters of patient consent, and this would be an entirely sensible new jurisdiction.


Blair & I agree,
on some things...

It is important for me to define the point at which I part company with the Blair Project.  In his general defence of his domestic strategy, enunciated last week, I agreed with him - I cannot fault Blair's broad, high-level principles.  


Special Footnote

I love the online newspapers, which are my access to the world - share them with me - click through to their Homepages from here -

     back to top


Diary 2002

Now up to date!  I have re-structured my Diary to give you a day-to-day means of looking back, throughout the year just click through

    back to top


Follow my August 2002 Russian Tour Diary, now unfolding in splendid technicolor - capacity problems have so far limited the scale of how much I can E-publish, but there is still plenty to read -

  back to top


Week 06
Sunday 9 February 2003

 
  Footnote to history, and to my fascination with stamps - I found these stamps, on a New Year clear-out of an old cupboard, strangely moving..  
 

 
Created by GMID Design & Communication

COPYRIGHT NOTICE
The originating content of this website is my own work, and subject to my copyright. But on one condition only, I hereby give my consent to its unrestricted reproduction for any purpose: the condition is that its source is subject to proper acknowledgment, giving my name, my assertion of copyright, and the name of this website as its source, namely: www.warrenevans.net
- is that a deal?  Roger WE