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Diary in date order Jan 2002 to date
but you also find this search
engine useful, in keeping track of events
Renewing
participatory democracy
My Little Red Book
A
New
Socialist Settlement
Bevan
Re-visited
Multiple Differential Uncertainty
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040315
Make sure you have not missed
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Check it out
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before that?
Other recent topics
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12 Friday
19 March 2004
I love nutters
We all know them. And
I suspect that, on a number of subjects (city regions, old age
pensions, corporate reform, drugs legalisation) I
am a nutter myself.
I suspect too that some people may
regard the radical banker Dane Clouston of Oxford as a nutter.
But they would be wrong.
I was honoured that he included me, as a WebEditor, in a Press Release
directed at all top UK News Editors yesterday, following Brown's inconclusive
Budget. Maybe he knows that I'm a closet
nutter.
Clouston focuses, as all effective nutters do, on one specific topic -
in his case the escalating disparities of capital-wealth within the UK - and
the need for "capital redistribution".
Dane campaigns as
"Universal Inheritance". We are accustomed to theses on income-disparity. But as an Associate
of the Chartered Institute of Banking, Dane asks that we examine the awful
story of inequitable capital
distribution, in personal terms.
We
should spend, not save
I
am indebted to Michael Howard, in the Budget Debate, for highlighting the
fall in personal savings. We are now saving just 5% of disposable income,
as compared with the longer-term UK rate of 10%-12%. We are now at the
long-term US savings-rate, which is 6%. For those on ordinary incomes,
the truth is that spending makes better sense than saving. The market
institutions of market capitalism have shown themselves to be incapable of
managing small savings, unreliable custodians of personal savings.
We need a larger, not a smaller, State.
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Are they trying to tell us something?
I am disturbed, as a child fatty myself, at the current vendetta against
overweight children. The thin majority is setting
up, for later years, the most horrific scenario of guilt, mental disorder and
depression for current and future generations of overweight children.
Obesity has clearly increased dramatically in last thirty years.
That is not to be denied. And
we are increasingly aware of the many trigger factors - lack of exercise, TV-viewing, genetic inheritance, poor diet. But one of the best-known
triggers for over-eating is simply anxiety. And the
last thirty years have, some would argue, been years of mounting anxiety. Much
over-eating, after all, is "comfort eating",,,
What if the new obesity "epidemic" is triggered by
growing unspoken anxieties among our children - about family
breakdown, about global conflict as seen on TV, about the warmongering of our leaders, about
global warming and natural disaster? Could our children be
picking up that anxiety, even without being fully conscious of its
ramifications?
Check out my own essay
Multiple
Differential Uncertainty, which offers a theoretical framework for these
matters.
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Do not coerce our teenagers
I rebel at new Government
proposals to raise the "school leaving age"
from 16 to 18. My nose tells me that the use of coercion "against" teenagers is already part of
the problem - and that problems of social disorder and violence would be
aggravated, by extending coercion to the age
of 18.
Indeed, my "liberal" instincts tell me that the compulsory
school-attendance age should be reduced
from 16 to 15. RoSLA was never a success. Beyond 15, everything should
of course be done to persuade teenagers to remain in full- or part-time education - but they
should be attracted into training, not forced into it.
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Housing Benefit a truly liberal reform
This week's report from Secretary of State Andrew Smith graphically issues a pet
theme of mine. It is that, as Right/Left divisions lose their
cutting edge, issues of human dignity and respect - issues of human and
civil rights - will rise rapidly up the political agenda. It is, sadly, unlikely that these pages
are read by any of the 4,000,000 poorer UK tenants who are entitled to
receive
Housing Benefit. But it is there, in the murky depths
of the Department of Work and Pensions, that a new view of citizenship and
human nature is emerging. I am
delighted.
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Barking up
the wrong tree
Reaction to Peter Hain's musings about the Labour
Party have been instructive. I welcome his airing his views
for the think-tank Catalyst,
But neither Hain, nor
his critics, begin to address the real problem, which is how to
manage future relationships between the Party-in-the Country, and the
representative salariat who now
control the political machine. This is not a matter, as Hain suggests, merely
of organising "supporters clubs" (i.e. Constituency Labour Parties, Unions)
more effectively. It is about giving them a distinctive, and honourable,
role to play in political life of this country. They must not be limited
to the pointless formulation of "long-term policy".
-
The balance of power between Party Members and the
political "class" must undergo a radical change, in style and in
content. We should be seeking to draw the sting that has entered the relationship, and build
constructively for the future. That is what
"Labour Links" is all about.
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Left
Activists' Corner
I have three moderately-left political projects to engage your interest,
in 2004 - nothing too revolutionary, you understand - and for your
delight I retain the Royal Mail stamps for February, which are
light-hearted and good fun...
(a)
Company Reform Coalition targeting a major Easter pow-wow in
London;
(b)
Questors - the birth of a new
profession, group planning expansion;
(c)
Labour Links,
seeking
to unlock the resources of the Labour Party - and I seek the opportunity
to speak to Party groups about Party reform
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Special
Footnote
I love the online newspapers, which
are my access to the world - share them with me - click through to their
here - I have added the English-language China Daily ... and I now
offer you the leading English-language Indian paper The Hindu.
They are all just
a click away.
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One
year ago
We
are hurtling through the year - and my cross-check on 2003 seems to throw
up more and more about the Iraq War. But I will try and give you a
flavour of what else I was thinking about, in February 2003 - when Robin
Cook was still Leader of the House of Commons...
House of Lords
Reform
Return to my
"Old
School"
Regulating
electronic surveillance
Exaggerating
risks of terrorism
City dynamism
ignored
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I
enjoy dipping into informed US West Coast chat, always up to
the minute, which can be found at
www.metafilter.com.
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Never miss
Steve Bell!
His
cartoons, from
The
Guardian - his wit and perception illuminate the
absurdities of the political scene...
It's my funeral..
My settled intent is to be buried in a cardboard box,
interned informally in some unobtrusive Welsh woodland. Cremation is
a polluting process, and the paraphernalia of conventional coffins are a
pantomime, also generating unnecessary waste and pollution. I do not
even intend to allow my remains to fester in some urban corner using up
land which could be applied to better purposes...
Having
discovered this remarkable NASA website, linked with the Hubble Telescope
and the NASA Mars exploration vehicles, with its current photographs from
outer space, I am reluctant
to let it go
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Rescuing
Public Libraries
The
public library service is in crisis. Between 1992 and 2002, library
visits dropped by 17% and book loans dropped by 25%. Library book
issues went down, while the commercial bookstores increased their sales. LIBRI
is a registered charity working to support and extend
public library services in society, and will soon be launching a new
website at www.libri.org.uk
And
this week, libraries had their very own Lords debate, to which the
excellent Libraries Minister
Lord (Andrew) McIntosh replied...
For full Hansard
record click here
Leave us alone
Is
Blair right? Did 11 September 2001 really change our world?
I don’t think it did. In my
view, the invasion of
Iraq
was far more significant than 9/11, because it unleashed the forces of
unilateral, global US interventionism.
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Politico’s for politicos
Online bookselling got a boost this week, when the Westminster bookshop
Politico's closed its doors in Artillery Row and went exclusively on-line.
Having been registered bookseller myself, in days of the Net Book Agreement
during the Swinging Sixties, I sensed that the shop itself was not a
success. The space was awkwardly shaped, overcrowded with books, and
incongruously equipped with a miniscule mezzanine “café” with two or three
tables, coffee and cakes – and no space to swing a cat.
The shop was
located in an expensive quarter, but was not big enough to do justice to its
stock or its function. The proprietor, Tory parliamentary candidate Iain
Dale has taken his business home, and will operate on the net, from
somewhere in Kent.
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And now for something completely different..
Can
I suggest you take a look at the remarkable situation on St Patrick's Day in Georgia, Adzharia,
South Ossetia and Abkhazia - through the eyes of the “Moscow Times”?
The latter are all three regions of Georgia, all seeking autonomy, and
Russia is trying to destabilise Georgia by backing the regions against the
new Georgian Government. We do not get to follow the story in our Press –
but it is gripping stuff…
Housing Chancellor
in a pickle
Brown's uneventful Budget was, in one
respect, an absolute mess. The mess was in
"housing". Part of the explanation lies the growing
UK wealth-divide, fuelled by a property-friendly legal regime which Labour
is entrenching ever more deeply: see Dane Clouston.
But the other
part of the explanation is that the Government refuses to sanction the
construction of public rented housing, for those left behind by the
property-value boom. The suggestion of a "Planning Gain Premium",
payable immediately upon the grant of a high-value planning consent will
fail. That was the scheme of the 1966 Betterment Levy, which failed
for precisely that reason. Thousands upon thousands of citizens were
called upon to pay out cash which they did not possess, merely because
planning consent had been granted on their property. That system
will not work, Gordon.
It saddens me that my own Government is
making such a pigs ear of a policy sector which is peculiarly my own. In
the 1970s I was a Special Adviser on housebuilding to the Wilson/Callaghan
Governments, on precisely this issue. We got the right solution with
Development Land Tax (1976) only to have all our good work
unpicked by Thatcher (1981).
- I owe you a fuller explanation - which
will follow. I promise.
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This speech was absurd
I
mean, of course, Tony Blair's speech last Saturday to the Spring Labour Party
Conference in Manchester. He has lost touch,
perspective. He likes making crisis speeches - and
this was another one. These are his words, E-mailed to every Labour Party
member
within the hour.
The task of our leaders
is to put
terrorist attacks into perspective, not to go in for such dramatisation
every time. They should not be using the vocabulary of war at all.
As we did for thirty years in Northern Ireland, they should use the language of peacetime, of civil disorder, and
ordinary criminality. We should not be the ones
to unleash, or to legitimise, the
language or the ways of war. To do that is to lose the confrontation, from
the very outset.
Why does he do it? Because he knows
he has lost personal legitimacy on other fronts. George Bush is
similarly bereft of personal legitimacy, albeit for different reasons.
They seek therefore to clothe themselves in the gory legitimacy of crisis. They both
believe that they somehow acquire stature from the very awfulness of the
event.
- Theirs is
the wrong leadership style. They must both be replaced by men
or women who are not discredited, and who stand a better chance of
finding the right style of leadership. The terrorists designate
themselves as the men of war.
We should not ape them.
Ours are the ways of democracy, of law, of personal dignity - and of
peace.
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Affordable housing
a will'o'th'wisp
Words matter. They matter because
they are our universal means of persuasion, encouragement, seduction,
illusion, deceit and deception. Including self-deception. And
the Labour Government (like the Tory Government which preceded it)
has deluded itself with the notion of "affordable
housing". Young rural couples are said to be denied a
future - because there is no
"affordable
housing". Welsh culture is under siege by English
incomers, because there is no
Young
professionals have to commute for hours, because there is insufficient
"affordable
housing". Public services are under pressure because
there is no
"affordable
housing".
That is nonsense.
The very terminology fudges the key distinction between owner-occupied and
rented housing. In an open market-place for freehold accommodation,
there is no such thing as "unaffordable" housing -
house-prices merely reflect purchaser-demand, and purchasers' willingness
to pay.
-
The real problem
is that "the market" fails to provide
housing-for-rent - the very commodity that many young and
lower-income people need. That is a systemic market failure, and
demands public intervention. And that is the challenge which
successive Governments have been trying to duck, by way of
self-delusion.
Gentle Massage
by Human Rights Act
Some important cases never make the
headlines. And the adjudication by the House of Lords in the cases
of Colin Middleton and Sheena Creamer was not destined for the headlines,
although it was creditably picked up by
The Guardian.
Both had committed suicide, in separate incidents, while in jail - and the
issue before the Lords related to the scope of of the inquest juries' findings.
- Hardly
headline-gripping stuff! But the Lords judgment
demonstrated clearly how the leavening effect of the Human Rights
Act 1998 is working its way, slowly but surely, through
our
Constitution, and our society.
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Grave Injustice
at Cross Hands
Two of you have asked for more about my new
crusade to made the Coal Authority pay up for wrongs done by the NCB to
former miners who bought their houses from the Coal Board, in the 1980s, in the panic of
privatisation. It is a dramatic story, and you will find it fully set out in my speech to the
Cross Hands public meeting last Saturday.
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I n a spirit of
comradely commiseration, I publish the commemorative stamps issued for
England's World Cup victory Down Under... Cheer up, the English!
Tough Campaigner
I met Shami
Chakrabarti for the first time last week, the Director of LIBERTY who last
year succeeded John Wadham. At 35, she is a great campaigner, having
worked as a lawyer both with LIBERTY and the Home Office.
Shami already has
important victories to her name.
She lacks nothing in
terms of commitment or public courage.
Katherine Gun was represented by
James Welch from
LIBERTY, in her defeat of the Government in the GCHQ Cheltenham case. Shami does not come to the post (as
many of her illustrious predecessors did) as Labour political
animals: hers has been the non-Party Civil Service path, and that will
stand her in good stead at the head of LIBERTY, as a independent non-Party
agency.
Recent
topics
Extending
the Welfare State
>>>
Territorial v Membership States
>>>
EU Immigration Blunkett is right
>>>
High politics Airport
Theory >>>
Blair confronts Clare Short >>>
EU migration socialist perspectives
>> One and
>> Two
Blair
progressive self-delusion
>>>
Asylum: KEEP
Judicial Review >>>
Iraq the
critical July time-slot >>>
MPs
Select
TWO per Constituency
>>>
Community
Interest Companies
>>>
The Clousot
State >>>
And read my Big Theory itself, at
Multiple Differential Uncertainty...
Or try my snappier
and more practical analysis of the Corporations and the Left
Coming to Terms
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040315
Make sure you have not missed
the previous edition
Check it out
And the one
before that?
Other recent topics
highlighted here
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