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.
   

 

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 Diary in date order Jan 2002 to date

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Renewing participatory democracy

My Little Red Book

A New Socialist Settlement

Bevan
Re-visited
 

Multiple Differential Uncertainty


Who am I? Biography  

 

      041025  Make sure you have not missed
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Week 44  Sunday
31 October 2004


Warrior's Return

This is my Homecoming Week, to the Editor's Desk. The grinding process of saving my local British Legion Club from financial collapse continues to place great demands upon my waking-hours, and the outcome is still in doubt.  Some "space" has been created by my September withdrawal from my City Directorship, of Estates & Agency Holdings plc, which has been taken private by its principal shareholders. My various charitable projects are proving demanding (Croeso, Hygeia, Libri) although it is gratifying that they are flourishing. 

But overhanging everything is my anguish at the treatment of asylum-seekers, for whom the Home Office remains the embodiment of a harsh and unsympathetic Fortress Britain.  In the last fortnight, I have been forced back into direct personal tribunal appearances, to help those abandoned by their own Solicitors by the Government's vicious "Merits Test": read all about it.

  • But that is more reason for me to write, for those minded to read.  The freedom of the Web is a glorious asset, even though this website continues to be monitored by the US Department of Defense, with USDD visits now having risen to a total of 42 hits (supplemented by a further 20 hits from the US Government itself). I hope they find it a good read.

You are in strange company


Liberal  Socialism

Martin Kettle explores in The Guardian the demise of 20th century socialism, and holds that the world is now reverting to conventional individualist "liberalism".

I disagree.   I recognise the powerful individualist elements that are at work in our civilisation, and I welcome them.  But there can be no reversion to Lloyd-George Liberalism, or any of its Continental versions: the whole world has been profoundly influenced by the socialism of the 20th century, and profoundly changed.  To the extent that the United States is not socialist, it stands discredited and its walls will not stand. 

In health, in law, in education, in communications, in environmental control, in the collective direction of society, socialism has become the dominant grammar of global politics.  We're all socialist now.  Socialism has raised the gaze of all peoples upwards, opened their horizons.  The socialist genius will not be put back into the bottle.

  • Our task is not to re-read the textbooks of the Liberals' 1906 victory.  It is to write the new Liberal Socialist text-books for a 2006 tomorrow. 

It was early in 2003 that I started preaching the Liberal Socialist message - and it seems to become more relevant by the day.


Arise Sir Robin

Good news that Robin Cook is now writing regularly for The Guardian, on Fridays.  He is making a great political success of his backbencher life, with grace and without rancour. He's a knight in my book.  In shining armour.

I cannot get excited, though, about the issue of the Black Watch and their move to Baghdad.  The only good thing is that it has given a few pusillanimous MPs the chance to change their position on the invasion itself. 

But compared with the awful wrong of our continuing presence overall, and the UK's continuing complicity in the Neo-Con Bush Conspiracy, this troop-movement seems to me a trivial matter, even if motivated by US presidential politics.

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Dismissive Darling

I am impatient, with the Pensions debate.  And I am angry.  Angry that New Labour Ministers can have been so dismissive, so insensitive, about one of the greatest concerns of our fellow-citizens.  I well remember attending, in a stuffy Commons dining-room, a pre-1997 seminar with Alistair Darling, organised by the Labour Finance & Industry Group. 

  • I argued for early action by New Labour to increase the basic Old Age Pension, and to restore its purchasing-power at least to 1981 levels.  He treated me with lip-curling condescension, as a pitiable amateur without political sense or understanding.  Did I not realise that the State Pension would have to wither away, to be replaced by measures “to assist the poorest pensioners”?  That was early-1997.

Nobody thinks that now.  Nor does the Adair Turner report significantly advance the debate, although has certainly raised the political profile of the issue.  I remain committed to a much higher, though deferred, State pension commitment.  I say: £160 per week at 70. 

And drop me a line

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Legal Aid for Asylum
a nasty political tale

Labour is proving a ruthless manager of the asylum process. This is all part of the positioning of Labour as the natural party of government, incapable of being outflanked by the Right.

  • True, the UK is still better and more humane in this sector than some of its EU counterparts.  But that is an undemanding comparison, when it comes a respect for human dignity, and human rights.  The quality of our asylum administration nevertheless falls far short of the standards to which we should be aspiring.

For my part, as a barrister by profession and a general manager by occupation, I am no "bleeding-heart liberal".  But I am, quite simply, ashamed of the poor quality of our public administration in this sector.  And I am particularly distressed, as a natural "advocate for the Defence" (I hated appearing for the Prosecution, when required to do so, at the Bar...) at the Government's manipulation of the Legal Aid system for political purposes.

  • Find out how David Blunkett has suborned the legal profession, in his drive to make the asylum system as nasty and as discouraging as possible: read all about it.

And drop me a line              back to top


Never miss Steve Bell! His cartoons, from The Guardian - his wit and perception illuminate the absurdities of the political scene... He's no lemon


I enjoy dipping into informed US West Coast chat, always up to the minute, which can be found at www.metafilter.com.


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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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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      My current topics

This beautiful tomato is intended as a peace offering for having been away for so long.  It's good to be back at the Editor's desk, with a few hours to share with you.  I know that this list of Thoughts is not up-to-date, and stretches back over several months - but I will overcome!  Ed

Extending the Welfare State >>>

Adjustment Pay for every worker >>>

Pay Guardianship Allowance >>>

We do not own our children >>>

"Institutional Racism" a fallacy >>>

Pensions at 70  Good Idea >>>

The Mischief of ASBOs >>>

US/EU: Wrong market models >>>

Immigration Insights >>>

Dodgy Opinion Surveys >>>

Are Public Schools charities? >>>

Taming the Corporations >>>

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One Year Ago 
30 October 2003

Blair's Palpitations
...first time around

Truth to tell, I felt a bit guilty, as the news of Blair's hospitalisation rolled in, on that fateful Sunday evening.  Because last June, I had speculated about the awesome pressures to which Blair was subject...


Two Years Ago 
21 October 2002

Nationalising
"Insurance"
...my radical musings

The very last act of the US Congress, before breaking up this week for the key 5 November Congressional Elections, was to extend Federal State backing to the beleaguered US insurance industry.  But if the "private" insurers cannot survive without re-insurance by the State, does not that mean that the risk-industry has been nationalised?  Is this not nationalisation by the back door?

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How to
counter anxiety

Take a look at The Age of Anxiety, a major think-piece by Madeleine Bunting, for The Guardian.  My only attempt at a philosophical essay is on this subject, and I have a distinctive analysis to propose.  I say that, for mankind, states of anxiety are endemic, and that as a species man has developed by evolution and by socialisation a bewildering array of counter-measures. You will find them all around at every turn, if you will only learn to spot them. 

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Royal Mail Award

My accolade this week goes to the Royal Mail, for re-issuing their magnificent "vegetable" stamps, with images that cleverly oversail the serrated edges of each stamp - creative, ingenious, and beautiful.  The idea is however tarnished, for me, by their issuing a sheet of spoof "decorations", to be used by customers in creating their own individualised stamps..

 

 

 

PS I confess that, when these beautiful stamps were first issued last year I experimented with the gimmick myself (this is from my 2003 archives) but I was not convinced.  What do you think?  Where does the greater beauty lie, in the decorated or undecorated version?  In nature or in "art"?


Are you a Libri?

The new charity Libri is firing on all cylinders, right now.  Libri challenges the Government, this week, to promote book-issues from public libraries. Too many libraries, they say, are becoming Internet cafes, needlessly competing with the private sector - and neglecting book-reading. The primary public requirement is for the cultivation of book-reading, and the deployment for libraries to achieve that end.

  • The Trust has just published the official CIPFA figures for declining book-issues, through the UK.  The Government may whistle in the wind, and rely on IT-visits to boost performance figures.  But the signs are not good.

Check out LIBRI


The Fabians are a great, enlightened Left-Wing political community some 7,000-strong - and we have many skills among our number.

Would you like to be added to the monthly Fabian Update e-mail list, just e-mail Fabian Research

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Activists' Update
October 2004

Three of my four pet reform projects are decidedly "alive", but the fourth is floundering, and will probably have to go onto the back-burner.  The weakling is "Labour Party Reform", in spite of the evidence from Brighton that radical reform is needed, if political Parties are to survive as viable political institutions. 

(a) Company Reform Coalition  In this, I am targeting the stimulation of a new UN treaty - nothing less! This difficult project has attracted a little more understanding in recent weeks, and will be the subject of an article from me in the September edition of The Chartist  - it's a slow burn.

Drop me a line

(b) Questors - there is growing official interest in the the birth of a new "citizens' advisory" profession, as the lawyers continue to price themselves out of the market - it is clear (a) that there is constitutional/legal space for such a creation and (b) that there would be no legal or institutional obstacles to its emergence - this leaves the ball unambiguously in my court, and I need allies...

Drop me a line

(c) Charitable Public Loos - my new charity Hygeia continues to make progress, and I think and believe that we are nearing a breakthrough in public toilet provision, although all our discussions are at this stage strictly confidential.  But we would welcome contributions from those of you who share our concern at the disappearance of the public loo...  

Drop me a line

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(d) Labour Links - the Brighton Labour Conference decisively underlined the  case for Party Reform - my latest attempt was in Cardiff in mid-June with the Fabians - but "Party reform" will face the implacable resistance of the professional salariat, and that makes it highly problematical.

 Drop me a line

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Other r ecent topics

Nuclear power: the only option >>>

"New" New Labour  Five Pillars >>>

Students!  Get political! >>>

US/EU: Wrong market models >>>

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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041025  Make sure you have not missed
the previous edition 
Check it out   
And the
one before that?   
Other recent topics highlighted here

Week 44  Sunday
31 October 2004

 

 
       
 

 
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