An introduction
This is a semi-public place to dump text too flimsy to even become a blog post. I wouldn't recommend reading it unless you have a lot of time to waste. You'd be better off at my livejournal. I also have another blog, and write most of the French journal summaries at the Eurozine Review.
Why do I clutter up the internet with this stuff at all? Mainly because I'm trying to get into the habit of displaying as much as possible of what I'm doing in public. Also, Blogger is a decent interface for a notebook
Why do I clutter up the internet with this stuff at all? Mainly because I'm trying to get into the habit of displaying as much as possible of what I'm doing in public. Also, Blogger is a decent interface for a notebook
Thursday, October 15, 2009
New Europe
The Wall Street Journal is, judging by its website, one of the few media organizations to pay serious attention to Central and Eastern Europe. It's mostly paywalled, alas, but there is at least a dedicated [blog](http://blogs.wsj.com/new-europe/) for us shallow-pocketed types.
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Class A blinkers
Simon Reynolds speaks truth:
My past life peddling MMORPGs to children made me deeply uncomfortable; I'd lump (some) online games in with twitter, religion, Marxist introspection and, yes, deconstruction as serious memetic dangers.
[written with a certain flippancy. Deconstruction has its uses, but too often it forms part of an inward-looking academic world unable to make much connection to the rest of reality. I'm very fond of those rare theorists who can harness deconstruction to achieve real-world ends]
one of my fiend heros (ex this parish) is said to have said that deconstruction did more damage to him than the drink and the drugs ever did.
My past life peddling MMORPGs to children made me deeply uncomfortable; I'd lump (some) online games in with twitter, religion, Marxist introspection and, yes, deconstruction as serious memetic dangers.
[written with a certain flippancy. Deconstruction has its uses, but too often it forms part of an inward-looking academic world unable to make much connection to the rest of reality. I'm very fond of those rare theorists who can harness deconstruction to achieve real-world ends]
media in spain
This is a notes-to-myself entry, in which I try to figure out the best online sources for Spanish news in English. There doesn't seem to be much, which I guess is useful encouragement to learn Spanish
- Guardian
- New York Times
- Google News
- Of sources aimed at expats, Typically Spanish seems to be the only one with any content at all. Euro Weekly News is low-volume and looks like repackaged wire copy.
- Barcelona: Barcelona Reporter has the most news (not much). Barcelona Metropolitan is an entertainment/lifestyle magazine; Barcelona Connect is mainly classifieds.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
PS in the regions
The Parti Socialiste may be disintegrating at a national level, but according to AG it's much stronger at a regional level.
The second president
Forget who will be the first EU president. The more interesting question is, who will be the second? After 2+ years under the new constitution, what kind of figure would make a plausible president? Will interest groups trampled by the first president push for a low-key successor? Would the position -- having, as it does, few formal powers -- turn out to be of minor importance? Will the first president be re-elected again and again? (is that possible under the Treaty of Lisbon?) Will politicians start openly campaigning for the office, rather than putting up a public face of being surprised and honoured to be considered?
After the Irish referendum
This [via CT] is a good overview of the state of play on the Lisbon treaty:
But some diplomats say it is the foreign policy high representative who may emerge as the strongest figure in the new set-up.
....
The foreign policy chief will be powerful because he or she will not only speak on behalf of EU national governments but will also hold the title of Commission vice-president. The holder will oversee the EU’s multi-billion euro foreign aid budget and control a diplomatic service that will ultimately employ up to 3,000 officials.
Goth clubs in Berlin
[from a comment posted elsewhere]
There's a goth club listing at http://etoile.de/; Berlin is in the section 'PLZ-Bereich 1'. You can probably read through the genre descriptions and club addresses without needing much German.
The Kit Kat Club is -- well, if you've had it recommended, you probably have an idea. I like it, although I've not been since a couple of years ago, when it was in a different venue. [I stopped going after seeing a page on their site seemingly saying that they don't want Turks or feminists in the club. Probably it's just an unfortunately-worded page, but it didn't make me want to go back]
Also on the sex end of the spectrum, check out Insomnia. It's a fetish club, with a monthly goth night called 'angel in bondage'.
K17 is the largest and most regular goth club, with a big dose of metal and industrial. On a Friday or Saturday, they generally have four floors: one trad goth and 80s, one electro/industrial, and two small ones for metal. The venue is ugly as hell, but also huge.
If you fancy going out on a Monday night, Duncker is a lovely smallish club, with a lot of regulars and a friendly atmosphere. They (always?) have some kind of barbeque-type food in their back courtyard, and will keep going until Tuesday morning. I think there's also a small goth market there every other sunday afternoon (http://www.darkmarket.de/).
Other places: Kato is more rock-oriented, and has lots of smallish live gigs. ACUD and Sama-Cafe are squats (perhaps legalised; I'm not sure), which do goth/wave nights. They're incredibly cheap (to make them accessible to everybody; do pay a bit more if you can!). Expect plenty of shabby-looking punks and people out of their heads on (cheap) Sternberg beer.
There's a goth club listing at http://etoile.de/; Berlin is in the section 'PLZ-Bereich 1'. You can probably read through the genre descriptions and club addresses without needing much German.
The Kit Kat Club is -- well, if you've had it recommended, you probably have an idea. I like it, although I've not been since a couple of years ago, when it was in a different venue. [I stopped going after seeing a page on their site seemingly saying that they don't want Turks or feminists in the club. Probably it's just an unfortunately-worded page, but it didn't make me want to go back]
Also on the sex end of the spectrum, check out Insomnia. It's a fetish club, with a monthly goth night called 'angel in bondage'.
K17 is the largest and most regular goth club, with a big dose of metal and industrial. On a Friday or Saturday, they generally have four floors: one trad goth and 80s, one electro/industrial, and two small ones for metal. The venue is ugly as hell, but also huge.
If you fancy going out on a Monday night, Duncker is a lovely smallish club, with a lot of regulars and a friendly atmosphere. They (always?) have some kind of barbeque-type food in their back courtyard, and will keep going until Tuesday morning. I think there's also a small goth market there every other sunday afternoon (http://www.darkmarket.de/).
Other places: Kato is more rock-oriented, and has lots of smallish live gigs. ACUD and Sama-Cafe are squats (perhaps legalised; I'm not sure), which do goth/wave nights. They're incredibly cheap (to make them accessible to everybody; do pay a bit more if you can!). Expect plenty of shabby-looking punks and people out of their heads on (cheap) Sternberg beer.
Turkey and Armenia are set to normalize relations today. They're setting up a commission to establish the history of the Armenian Genocide (doubtless carefully skirting that term). Boy, that's going to be one of the most scarily politicised pieces of work going!
Hillary Clinton is witnessing the signing. Wonder if she's bringing with her Samanta Power, author of A Problem From Hell and once-and-future Obama advisor.
Hillary Clinton is witnessing the signing. Wonder if she's bringing with her Samanta Power, author of A Problem From Hell and once-and-future Obama advisor.
Friday, October 9, 2009
I like Obama, but this is ridiculous
Obama getting the Nobel Peace Prize? I can only add to the chorus of WTF. Looking back over previous winners, I see a lot of unexciting, so-so awards, but not that many out-and-out fuckups. Dare I say it, I think this is even worse than Kissenger. With Kissenger (also Arafat/Rabin/Peres), at least they were recognizing a warmonger belatedly trying to wind down a war. The Obama nomination doesn't even have that excuse.
books
I've just arrived back at my mother's place in Oakham, with the plan of spending a couple of weeks quietly working. And now, I realise, also leafing through the piles of books that have accumulated here. Books once read and forgotten; books I've been itching to look at gain for months or years; reference books I never have in the right place to refer to them.
I'm very much looking forward to getting to know them again.
I'm very much looking forward to getting to know them again.
Monday, October 5, 2009
FT on the French integration debate
On the never-vanishing topic of Islam in France, this article in the FT is pretty good.
Via Art Goldhammer, unsurprisingly
Farhad Khosrokhavar, director of research at France’s Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, estimates that 15 to 20 per cent of French Muslims do not practise Islam at all. Fasting during Ramadan is considered a basic duty of the religion, yet only about 70 per cent of French Muslims even claim to do it. In short, European Islam has many of the same problems as European Christianity.
Via Art Goldhammer, unsurprisingly
Sunday, October 4, 2009
This list of topics for a design magazine was composed in the year I was born. Nothing, it seems, has changed: they're still interesting, still important, still underexplored. Disappointing, that, it a way.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
A collective spasm of high-level excuse-making
I am, like Art Goldhammer somewhat baffled by the French government treating the Roman Polanski as a matter of artistic freedom, rather than rape. There aren't many situations in which I'm on the side of Law and Order, but this must be one of them.
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Making lists for fun and profit
This, to my utter surprise, is not just usable but something I'm honest-to-God likely to use. Wonders will never cease.
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Looks like there's a new squat just outside Paris. Wouldn't count on it lasting more than a few days, but you never know.
Meanwhile I'm sat at home, already in bed (it's only 8:30), feeling uncertain and oddly morose. My life currently has a lot of moving parts, and I'm not entirely sure I have them all lined up. Alternatively, it could just be lack of sleep.
Meanwhile I'm sat at home, already in bed (it's only 8:30), feeling uncertain and oddly morose. My life currently has a lot of moving parts, and I'm not entirely sure I have them all lined up. Alternatively, it could just be lack of sleep.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
I feel a little sorry for the Porguese parliament. Elections are coming up on Sunday, and I'm struggling to find a single article about them in the French or British press. The German media, on the other hand, is giving them a fair bit of attention. Why the difference in interest? I have not hte faintest idea. German elections are happening on the same day -- but if anything, I would have expected that to divert attention away from Portugal. Mysterious.
[I fully expect that some other European country is holding elections this week, and I haven't heard anything about it]
[I fully expect that some other European country is holding elections this week, and I haven't heard anything about it]
films
Am I just noticing films more at the moment, or are there a lot of good new films floating around? I'm thinking of the following -- none of which I've seen, all of which I want to see.
- District 9 -- political commentary in the form of Science Fiction. i.e. what written SF has always been about, but with a budget.
- Neuilly sa mère, a comedy about the class divide in Parisian suburbs
- Inglorious basterds. The only WWII film I have any desire to watch
Momus in Paris
I seem to finally be running into a fair number of interesting places in Paris. So last night I finally saw Momus, the (currently Berlin-based) writer/singer, reading from the French edition of his new 'Book of Jokes'. The venue, La Société de Curiosités, is a comfortable looking one-room space. It's run as a private club, which I think is basically a legal hack so you're allowed to smoke there.
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Poetry slams in Paris
Tonight I finally made it to the weekly French-language poetry slam at Culture Rapide in Belleville. Impressed. Very impressed. Aware that my being impressed counts somewhat less given the difficulty I had in following some of the French poetry.
Of everything I've seen in my 2+ months in Paris, this was the first event that really impressed me, that made me want to stay in town just to remain in its orbit.
Why did it take me so long to end up there? The same place also hosts a regular English-language slam, which I visited soon after I arrived. It wasn't actually bad -- just somewhat insipid, more like a poetry reading than the slams I'd come to love in Berlin. So I wasn't inspired to visit its French sister, at least not before August came and put everything interesting in Paris under wraps.
Of everything I've seen in my 2+ months in Paris, this was the first event that really impressed me, that made me want to stay in town just to remain in its orbit.
Why did it take me so long to end up there? The same place also hosts a regular English-language slam, which I visited soon after I arrived. It wasn't actually bad -- just somewhat insipid, more like a poetry reading than the slams I'd come to love in Berlin. So I wasn't inspired to visit its French sister, at least not before August came and put everything interesting in Paris under wraps.
Monday, September 21, 2009
Accidental outing on facebook
Both important and unsurprising: your friendship network reveals your sexuality, with a pretty high accuracy.
While George's work (among others) goes much, much further in pulling down illusions of privacy in networks. But sometimes we need the simple stuff to hammer home the basic point that it's more-or-less impossible to make your connections public, and still have any real form of anonymity.
[admittedly the first form, at least, is doing little more than mechanizing what happens socially in any case]
Using data from the social network Facebook, they made a striking discovery: just by looking at a person’s online friends, they could predict whether the person was gay. They did this with a software program that looked at the gender and sexuality of a person’s friends and, using statistical analysis, made a prediction.
While George's work (among others) goes much, much further in pulling down illusions of privacy in networks. But sometimes we need the simple stuff to hammer home the basic point that it's more-or-less impossible to make your connections public, and still have any real form of anonymity.
[admittedly the first form, at least, is doing little more than mechanizing what happens socially in any case]
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Segolene Royal's new website has received plenty of much-deserved mockery in France, but not nearly enough from the rest of the world. Go, admire the purple!
104
Just back from a film/discussion about a violence and arrests at a demonstration in Paris last March. I was somewhat underwhelmed by the film itself: riot-porn shot in black and white, with the sound turned way down. i.e. making itself look arty without using a great deal of art.
The discussion that followed, though, was excellent. Sylvain George, who shot the film, led it, with enthusiastic comments from a small audience consisting in large part of people who had taken place in the protest. Despite being too confused and tongue-tied to contribute to it myself, I was cheered up to find some fervent opinions being expressed for once.
My main reason for going, though, was an excuse to visit the arts centre 104. It's much larger and more obviously government-funded than I'd imagined*. It reminds me a little of the Tate Modern: a massive, deliberately under-utilised space, a painfully clean industrial conversion. By the look of 104, I imagine it's a former rail station or similar. Like a lot of places in Paris, it initially rubbed me up the wrong way by being too clean, too expensive-looking. But the programme of events is impressive, they're mostly free or reasonably priced, and it seems to be providing space for artists to work rtaher than just strut. I'd feel considerably more at home there if it had a decent covering of grime, but that's just my personal neuroses making themselves known.
* Actually, I suspect I'd confused it with somewhere else, such as a more self-organized atelier, but I can't disentangle my memories. Such is the problem of using numbers as names.
The discussion that followed, though, was excellent. Sylvain George, who shot the film, led it, with enthusiastic comments from a small audience consisting in large part of people who had taken place in the protest. Despite being too confused and tongue-tied to contribute to it myself, I was cheered up to find some fervent opinions being expressed for once.
My main reason for going, though, was an excuse to visit the arts centre 104. It's much larger and more obviously government-funded than I'd imagined*. It reminds me a little of the Tate Modern: a massive, deliberately under-utilised space, a painfully clean industrial conversion. By the look of 104, I imagine it's a former rail station or similar. Like a lot of places in Paris, it initially rubbed me up the wrong way by being too clean, too expensive-looking. But the programme of events is impressive, they're mostly free or reasonably priced, and it seems to be providing space for artists to work rtaher than just strut. I'd feel considerably more at home there if it had a decent covering of grime, but that's just my personal neuroses making themselves known.
* Actually, I suspect I'd confused it with somewhere else, such as a more self-organized atelier, but I can't disentangle my memories. Such is the problem of using numbers as names.
Troy Kennedy Martin died last week. Not a name I knew -- but I had repeatedly heard tell of Edge of Darkness, an impressively well-regarded BBC series from the 80s, which he wrote. So I settled down to watch it. So far (2 episodes in), I'm pretty impressed. Some irritating artefacts of its era -- the slow pace, the constant drinking -- but the plot is fascinating. More later, maybe.
Saturday, September 19, 2009
This is a good case of why I'm occasionally uncomfortable with novels of ideas. Calvino's summary of logic vs. empiricism is neat -- but this is something I can read argued much more closely in textbooks and journal articles. Without the plot, what's the point.
[I'm aware that, between this and the last post, I seem to be arguing that thrillers are the only books worth reading. Maybe I should follow that...]
[I'm aware that, between this and the last post, I seem to be arguing that thrillers are the only books worth reading. Maybe I should follow that...]
Twilight
A few weeks ago, I tried reading the first of the Twilight books. I fully expected to loathe it, and there are plenty of good reasons to do so. But there's something addictive about its fixation on a Mary Sue -- it becomes much more appealing than any non-cardboard characters would be.
In short, I enjoyed it. Had I been a neurotic teenager, it would probably have spoken more directly to me [as a neurotic twenty-something, the distance is generally a little too great].
But then, I also approved of the Da Vinci Code.
In short, I enjoyed it. Had I been a neurotic teenager, it would probably have spoken more directly to me [as a neurotic twenty-something, the distance is generally a little too great].
But then, I also approved of the Da Vinci Code.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Penny Red starts her column in the morning star. Notable mainly for looking back to the 80s as a heyday of counter-culture. Given enough time, all things start to look good.
Friday, September 4, 2009
Videos to listen to
Things I've been listening to:
- Bruce Sterling on Augmented Reality [50m] -- not much shocking content, by his Sterling's standards, but pleasantly upbeat
- Lots of TED Talks. I've been unexpectedly disappointed by most of the recent ones. Possibly, as with OReilly conferences, my expectations are now so high that reality can only disappoint. Also, as John Robb speculates, corporate/financial backing may have steered them away from decent thinking on this year's Collapse Of Capitalism. [or perhaps, since we're currently in a hype-bubble of financial apocalypse, treating this as Just Another Recession is the forward-looking thing to do
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Beyond the reality-based community
The Yorkshire Ranter:
Similarly it's not entirely bogus to link the collapse of the centre-left today to the collapse of the far left in the 90s (which in turn came about from the collapse of the USSR). Eurocommunists, as well as being useful idiots for the Kremlin, were crucially also outriders for the social democrats. The Trots may have been loathed by the moderates, and may have lost them numerous elections one way or another, but they also forced them to confront serious issues. Here's hoping the pirates, the greens, and the non-party activists can fulfill the same purpose today.
I occasionally make the point that after the Left invented post-modernism, the Right operationalised it and rolled it out as a coherent political-media-aesthetic package. If your politics depends on disagreeing with objective reality, and persuading people to vote against their interests, there is a huge opportunity in the realisation that it's possible to have multiple competing truths. Setting the limits of debate, and controlling the language in which it is carried out, is a valid and proven strategy for power.
Similarly it's not entirely bogus to link the collapse of the centre-left today to the collapse of the far left in the 90s (which in turn came about from the collapse of the USSR). Eurocommunists, as well as being useful idiots for the Kremlin, were crucially also outriders for the social democrats. The Trots may have been loathed by the moderates, and may have lost them numerous elections one way or another, but they also forced them to confront serious issues. Here's hoping the pirates, the greens, and the non-party activists can fulfill the same purpose today.
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Muslim-bashing
The inane, paranoid meme that Europe is about to be overrun by evil Muslims has somehow managed to burst out of the right-wing cul-de-sac in which it deserves to be confined, and spreading tentacles far more dangerously than is its purported target.
Of the resistance against obnoxious stupidity, this dissection of a recent book on the subject has deservedly got a lot of links. But the one I'm really enjoying is this article from the Guardian. It steps back slightly from the neverending claims and counter-claims, and gets a better view of the whole picture:
It also raises a historical angle on the French veil debate which I hadn't previously been aware of:
Of the resistance against obnoxious stupidity, this dissection of a recent book on the subject has deservedly got a lot of links. But the one I'm really enjoying is this article from the Guardian. It steps back slightly from the neverending claims and counter-claims, and gets a better view of the whole picture:
Ordinary Muslims in Europe, who suffer from the demoralisation caused by living as perennial objects of suspicion and contempt, are far from thinking of themselves as a politically powerful, or even cohesive, community, not to speak of conquerors of Europe. So what explains the rash of bestsellers with histrionic titles - While Europe Slept, America Alone, The Last Days of Europe?
It also raises a historical angle on the French veil debate which I hadn't previously been aware of:
The veil, fixed in the 19th century by the French as a symbol of Islam's primitive backwardness, was used to justify the brutal pacification of north African Muslims and to exclude them from full citizenship.
Saturday, August 29, 2009
Attacking the poor in Sao Paulo
Jim Jay has an impressively wide reading list; he's always pointing out interesting articles I'd never have found otherwise.
A recent link from Jim Jay's impressively wide reading-list: violent slum clearance in an area of Sao Paulo called 'Capao Redondo'*.
This kind of thing is doubtless happening all the time; there's a general bubble that I almost always ignore. I only notice it now because I'm midway through Mike Davis' book 'planet of slums'. Davis does a particularly good job of taking slum settlement and clearances out of the falsely clear-cut world of legal vs. illegal, and pointing out the nexus of power and money -- tolerance of 'illegal' slums either because they are inevitable (the people have nowhere else to go) or even because squatters help prepare land which can then be developed privately.
*Not knowing anything about Brazil, I'm flummoxed the details. Wikipedia claims the population of Capåo Redondo as 300,000, but the eviction seems to be only of a far smaller area within that.
A recent link from Jim Jay's impressively wide reading-list: violent slum clearance in an area of Sao Paulo called 'Capao Redondo'*.
This kind of thing is doubtless happening all the time; there's a general bubble that I almost always ignore. I only notice it now because I'm midway through Mike Davis' book 'planet of slums'. Davis does a particularly good job of taking slum settlement and clearances out of the falsely clear-cut world of legal vs. illegal, and pointing out the nexus of power and money -- tolerance of 'illegal' slums either because they are inevitable (the people have nowhere else to go) or even because squatters help prepare land which can then be developed privately.
*Not knowing anything about Brazil, I'm flummoxed the details. Wikipedia claims the population of Capåo Redondo as 300,000, but the eviction seems to be only of a far smaller area within that.
No embargo
Embargoes in journalism are dying, according to Owni -- various outlets including the Wall Street Journal have decided to ignore them. Blame internet-time.
danah, unfair but funny:
[incidentally, I was impressed to see danah's blog turn up on [French] Books magazine's list of essential reading about the internet, alongside much more established/institutionalized sources. Increased my respect for them, even if they did capitalize her name]
Best that I can tell, most universities are fundamentally real estate barons who gain public credibility by offering higher education
[incidentally, I was impressed to see danah's blog turn up on [French] Books magazine's list of essential reading about the internet, alongside much more established/institutionalized sources. Increased my respect for them, even if they did capitalize her name]
Friday, August 28, 2009
Digital rights and the German elections
It's good that Berlin's annual Freiheit statt Angst (freedom not fear) demonstration falls just a couple of weeks before the election; I can only hope it pushes digital rights onto the agenda. Here is a comparison of the various party positions on privacy &c. Unsurprisingly the pirate party comes out best, followed by Die Linke and Die Grüne -- none of them likely to make it into any ruling coalition, alas.
It'd be nice if the Piratenpartei could manage an upset comparable to what the Swedes pulled off in the European elections. I can't imagine it happening although, as with the growth of environmentalism into a broad political philosophy, it's not inconceivable that the pirates could become a serious political force over the years.
It'd be nice if the Piratenpartei could manage an upset comparable to what the Swedes pulled off in the European elections. I can't imagine it happening although, as with the growth of environmentalism into a broad political philosophy, it's not inconceivable that the pirates could become a serious political force over the years.
The worst way to follow German elections
Incidentally, twitter tags for the German elections: #wahl09, #btw09, #bundestagswahl. Doubt I'll be following them; I've repeatedly tried to gather information from twitter, and always found the signal-to-noise ratio atrocious. But perhaps I'll recant; if so, here are the links.
German elections
Germany has federal elections next month; polls are here. In accordance with this year's European theme of a centre-left utterly unable to take advantage of the economic crisis, the SPD are steadily losing support. Consequently the entire left-wing is on the back foot. The Left and the Greens aren't making up much ground -- and even if they were, it wouldn't affect the electoral maths. The only coalition able to challenge the CDU/FPD would be one uniting the SPD, Die Linke and Die Grüne. Many SPD leaders refuse to contemplate a coalition with Die Linke, seeing them as unreformed East German communists without any place in a democratic Germany. Some strands within Die Linke are equally reluctant to serve in such a coalition. A coalition isn't impossible -- but the SPD would probably prefer a few more uneventful years of Grand Coalition, rather than risking tearing it apart for the sake of an even more diverse coalition. The other outside possibility, an SPD/Green/FPD coalition, seems pretty implausible given the steady rightward movement of the FPD since the 80s. It could happen if the CDU somehow made themselves obnoxious partners, but that's outstandingly unlikely with compromise-loving Merkel at the helm.
There are things to be excited about in this election, but the national picture isn't one of them. While I'd love to see the CDU/CSU lose their 10+ point lead over the SDP, it seems pretty unlikely. The Greens and the Left might make some small gains, but the polls don't show any staggering motion. So, despite this being the federal election, I'm somewhat more interested to watch the changes at a local level, observing which parties are improving their machines. More on that -- well, when I can get round to writing about it. So, possibly never.
There are things to be excited about in this election, but the national picture isn't one of them. While I'd love to see the CDU/CSU lose their 10+ point lead over the SDP, it seems pretty unlikely. The Greens and the Left might make some small gains, but the polls don't show any staggering motion. So, despite this being the federal election, I'm somewhat more interested to watch the changes at a local level, observing which parties are improving their machines. More on that -- well, when I can get round to writing about it. So, possibly never.
Liberal Conspiracy � Climate Camp: Watching the Watchers
Laurie dismisses Climate Camp as being overly concerned with self-image. Or at least that's how a bunch of irritated LibCon commenters see it, and manage a rousing defence of CC in the comments. Possibly there's a more interesting point being made about the Spectacle -- but if so, it's very well hidden
Thursday, August 27, 2009
CCTV is useless
Perplexingly so; even I'd thought the cameras were more useful than this:
Just one crime is solved a year by every 1,000 CCTV cameras in Britain's largest force area, it was claimed today.
[via Police State]
Just one crime is solved a year by every 1,000 CCTV cameras in Britain's largest force area, it was claimed today.
[via Police State]
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Racism in the Mail
Some more from Nick Davies' Flat Earth News, this time him being particularly damning about the Mail:
Perhaps I have been unlucky, but hI have never come across a reporter from the Daily Mail who did not have some similar story, of black people being excluded from the paper because of their colour. A district reporter told me he would call up from Manchester to tell the news desk a story, 'and they would always ask: "Are they our kind of people?" i.e. "Are they white, middle class?" Or more often it would be: "Are they of the dusky hue?" And if they were of the dusky hue, then they didn't want the story.'
I mentioned this to another reporter, who has spent several decades on the Mail, and he immediately named the senior news executive who was most keen on the 'dusky hue' euphemism. And this is not a thing of the past. While I was writing this book, I spoke to a local news agency who had just had the Daily Mail news desk on the phone, checking out a murder on their patch and asking if the victim was white or black so that they could decide whether they wanted the story.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
My little town
Last month I mentioned Simon & Garfunkel's Richard Cory. Another Paul Simon song that I fell in love with around the same time, was My Little Town
This is another one where there is some beautifully underplayed anger behind the sweetness. Or so I imagined: looking back now, there's hardly anything to it:
This is another one where there is some beautifully underplayed anger behind the sweetness. Or so I imagined: looking back now, there's hardly anything to it:
And after it rains
Theres a rainbow
And all of the colors are black
Its not that the colors arent there
Its just imagin-ation they lack
...
I was just my fathers son
Saving my money
Dreaming of glory
Twitching like a finger
On the trigger of a gun
Leaving nothing but the dead and dying
Back in my little town
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