|
|
Renewing participatory democracy Multiple Differential Uncertainty
|
040614 Make sure you have not missed the previous edition Check it out And the one before that? Other recent topics highlighted here
Week
25 Sunday
Read all about it! Pensions
When will the Government grasp the pensions nettle? Public discontent rages on. Ordinary pensioners are forced into the grip of means-tested State supplements above very low income-levels. Private pension investments fail to generate confidence, and their lack of credibility is probably terminal. Middle-age anxieties accelerate, causing growing distress. Lobbies for benefits-in-kind flourish, because of the Government's failure to make provision for a satisfactory State Old Age Pension, payable as of right on a universal basis. The TUC has now published an emotive attack on "pensions at 70", which wholly fails to grapple with the real issues, relying on appeals about those who will "die before receiving their pension". 17% of the population already die before reaching the pensionable age of 65. That is not a rational basis for debate.
The Politics of
You
may recall that, having canvassed curious undergraduates during my
unsuccessful Labour campaign for Swansea City Council a fortnight ago, I promised to set out my political stall for them. Why should
a successful student bother about “politics” at all?
That was the
question.
I’ve now had a chance to think about it. I have concentrated only on the “selfish” reasons, ignoring the moral or systemic political arguments that might come into play. It makes good sense to take politics seriously, as a matter of simple self-interest. The
Internet
![]() I distrust
UKIP, the Euro Election and Euro 2004 have besieged us with bogus concepts of "identity" - and more particularly "British identity". This language is insubstantial, without meaning. It generates the fallacious idea that there is such a thing as "British identity" - which I deny. "Identity" is essentially a personal matter, of individuality, of personality. An "identity" card does not designate your collective "allegiance" or adherence to anything or anyone: it merely records the distinctive features of your individuality, so that you as an individual can be identified. There are other ways of describing different senses of allegiance, or a consensus view - during international games, when the Oscars are awarded, when a compatriot is honoured in some way, finds success. But they do not engage my identity in any meaningful sense. As race, culture and ethnicity rise up the conversation agenda, "national identity" is gaining spurious ground, journalistically and intellectually: it is a mischievous, divisive and useless concept.
Iraq enters danger zone
The new UN Iraq Resolution exposes the Iraqi people to the greatest possible political danger. Their new US puppet "Government", lacking any democratic legitimacy, will on 1 July be entitled to sign "sovereign" contracts for the privatisation of oil and utility services, privatisation on a huge scale, as well as grant long-term leases for US military bases. And the pressures on this puppet regime will be enormous, to accommodate American commercial and political interests. The nominated Iraqi "leaders" will rule only by grace of the American military, without any countervailing democratic legitimacy, and without the Police and military resources to defend themselves. They will be stooges. The new leaders have already made key concessions to the US, inviting the Americans to stay for at least a year after 30 June. Many more concessions will follow.
Territoriality Regular readers of LivePolitics will know of my long-running preoccupation with the "territorial state", and its superiority over the newer forms of "membership state". I raised with you last February the related issue of "extra-territorial" jurisdiction, where States claimed the right to operate lawfully outside their own territory. And all my political instincts tell me I should resist moves towards institutionalising the newer concept of the " Membership State". I dislike the image of my country as an exclusive club, with "insiders" who are members, and others who are not. For that approach carries huge systemic risks of global division, social and political exclusion, and awful military confrontation.But popular opinion if firmly on the side of the "Club" view of politics, both here in the UK and other countries. And it seems that I must turn my political imagination to ensuring that we get...
? Drop me a line The Fabians are a great, enlightened Left-Wing political community some 7,000-strong - and we have many skills among our number. PS If, without joining, you would like to be added to the monthly Fabian Update e-mail list, just e-mail Fabian Research
![]()
Can there be anyone left cold by the sight of great ships? The Royal
Mail stamps for May mark the launch of the new Queen Mary.. Great
ships bring out the best in everyone.
Special Footnote
|
Libraries & LIBRI I shall be at the London Seminar on Monday 21 June, convened by Culture Minister Andrew McIntosh. "How come?" (I hear you cry...) Well - I am Secretary (and Founder Trustee) of the Libri Trust, a charity dedicated to the improvement and development of public libraries. It is our recent report, Who's in Charge?, penned by the brilliant Tim Coates, that has triggered the Seminar. I am delighted that the Government response has been so decisive. Our immediate concern is to counter the catastrophic decline in book-lending and library usage which has dominated the last decade. In the longer term, we plan to encourage communities to create and operate communal libraries, to supplement conventional State provision.
Asylum Legal Services "Guardian" Travesty
I was appalled to read The Guardian's leaked report of investigations into Licensed "immigration solicitors", and allegations of overcharging. It was grossly partial and biased. This sector is indeed a murky and complex one, in which I am daily engaged, working on a pro bono basis - I know how it works. And I have no doubt that there are some Solicitors who exploit the system. Friday's Guardian carries a wave of correspondence protesting - though principally at the Audit Report, rather than the Guardian coverage. But the system itself is a shoddy and ill-conceived administrative scheme, which treats Solicitors shabbily and causes anguish to many hapless asylum-seekers, as they are abandoned by their Solicitors in mid-process. I am currently in contact with eighteen asylum-seekers in Swansea who have been abandoned in this way. I have to hold two "surgeries" every week, just to pick up the pieces, from this shoddy scheme.
Where I am going There is no way back
But I cannot. That option is not open to me. I must decide. And for me there is no question of “going back” to earlier Labour strategies: I am completely unconvinced by Frank Dobson, writing in Tuesday's Guardian. He is guilty of an undifferentiated, unquestioning nostalgia, which would move Labour further away from its electorate. The problem, as I see it, is that New Labour has not gone far enough, and has now run out of steam - politically and intellectually. I will stay in the Labour Party, and box my corner as best I can. This will be my fivefold focus -
I plan to use my personal resources more selectively in future, to focus on these five policy sectors. What about “Human Rights”? For me, human rights are not a specific policy-end in themselves, but they constitute the medium within which all issues fall to be addressed and resolved.I distrust
Yet there is no such thing. It's a cop out. The problem is that non-racist systems are being perverted: they become racist as practised by a significant proportion of the individuals involved. The racism nevertheless remains that of prejudiced individuals, who bring to their defined jobs or functions racist presumptions which distort their judgments and their actions. The key problem lies with prejudiced senior officers, who personally tolerate racism in their ranks. There is nothing "institutionalised" about it.
Roman law The Romans invented it, and all contemporary European countries have now abolished it. The Irish were the last to do so, by referendum last Friday 11 June 2004. It is the ius soli - literally, the law of the soil - the legal doctrine that every person takes his status from the territory of his birth. Civis Romanus sum. The UK retained the law until the late 1980s, but it wreaked havoc with all forms of immigration control, and was then abolished. Citizenship is now either inherited from ones parents or grandparents or granted by way the administrative process of naturalisation.
Managing religious diversity
The drive for the creation of more Muslim state schools is entirely understandable, but it should be resisted. We should meet the reasonable demands of Muslim communities in other ways. We should review the institution of the state school itself, and ensure that each school makes reasonable provision for the weekday observances of all its pupils, whatever their religious observances.
But the Muslim claim highlights the ultimate absurdity of the "English solution". It is that very formula which must be reviewed, and existing practices also modified: the sensible course would be to disestablish the CofE, just as the Church has been disestablished in Wales. Religious observances and preferences continue to inspire mankind, and every multi-cultural society must develop appropriate institutional solutions - that is the political challenge that we face.
Left Activists' Corner
I have three moderately-left political projects to engage your interest, as 2004 advances to mid-point - nothing too revolutionary, you understand - and now illustrated by the high diplomacy of our relationship with France, which adorned our mail during April.
Extending the Welfare State >>> Adjustment Pay - for every worker >>>
Teenage Education Civil rights, Continental style >>> Nuclear power: the only option >>> Capitalism: Sumatra Test Case >>> "Public" Schools are not charities >>> Institutional Racism a fallacy >>>
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
040614
Make sure you have not missed
Week
25 Sunday
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Webmasters unite! These are this week's Missing Persons, taken from The Big Issue. If you recognise anyone, contact www.missingpersons.org or ring 020-8392-4592 - and this is surely a free service which volunteer Webmasters could offer more widely - put the idea around!
|
|
Created by GMID Design & Communication COPYRIGHT
NOTICE |