Thursday, 15 April 2010

Armando Iannucci's #twitterforce to put Tory Big Society into action

David Cameron invoked the spirit of JFK to ask 'what you can do for your country', the Thick Of It creator is starting a police force.
Yesterday, political journalists were having fun with the Tories' invitation to join their government, asking for diplomatic postings to Caribbean islands and suchlike. (No word yet on whether my formerly very private wish to be Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster will be granted.)
Today it is the turn of the comedians: Jeremy Hardy has taken out his own appendix and Armando Iannucci is taking up the Tories' offer to run local public services with an attempt to organise his own police force for Wigan – a #twitterforce.
Screengrab of Ianucci's Twitterforce

We will keep you updated with any developments in Iannucci's bottom-up power-to-the-people crime-fighting initiative.

Art Depot Moscow 2006 - Free Jazz Ethno Festival








Musicians: 
Piotr Rachoń, Gendos, Elena Belyaeva, Mazzoll, Jon Dobie & Shoji Hano
Absolutely fugn superb!!!
Is there a recording of this?

Wednesday, 14 April 2010

WTF??? (How can people take the Daily Mail seriously?)

Cancer danger of that night-time trip to the toilet

BOLLOX!!!

First arrest!

scribblesvurt @AIannucci first Wigan arrest! http://tweetphoto.com/18390224 #twitterforce

#twitterforce: Print out & wear proudly

Live from Wigan

#twitterforce One of our volunteers is in Wigan now, but I need to see an arrest. http://tweetphoto.com/18389111
Armando Iannucci AIannucci #twitterforce. I need someone to perform a citizen's arrest in Wigan, with photo proof. They can choose our slogan.

I demand a recount LOL!

Armando Iannucci AIannucci
#twitterforce Well I liked 'Yes Wi-gan!' but yuou've voted for 'Things Are Going To Get Battered.' So we now have a constitutional crisis
 

The important vote

AIannucci >#twitterforce We need to vote on our slogan. Best 3 are 'Yes wi-gan!', 'Things Are Going To Get Battered' or 'A Fair Choice For Change.'


 exilestreet

@AIannucci Can we do it? Yes Wigan!
 


Morning. If you've just joined us, 1000 of us chose to start our own police-force last night, and voted to police Wigan. #twitterforce

Thanx Martin/

"...just to say I love your blog , a little oasis of sanity on the interwebs!"

BNP play dress ups

It certainly seems the British National Party (BNP) will stoop to any level possible to portray some kind of image of being the caring party who are standing up for the rights of British people and British values. It now seems that Nick Griffin is to be flanked everywhere he goes by a man dressed in British Army uniform.
Nick Griffin Flanked By The BNP Soldier
But as ever with the BNP all is not as it would seem to be, the man dressed as a soldier is the BNP’s own Adam Walker who is also standing as an MP for the BNP in County Durham, so it would seem that Adam Walker doesn’t need to bother campaigning in County Durham as he is too busy pretending to be a British Soldier in Barking with Nick Griffin.
Adam Walker BNP Candidate for County Durham
Adam Walker is no stranger to the news himself having recently been sacked from his post as a teacher for posting racist comments on the internet during a lesson and is currently awaiting the outcome of a General Teaching Council which could strike Adam Walker off as a teacher, his brother Mark Walker also a BNP candidate was also sacked from his teaching position for a similar reason.
Asked if he was a real soldier, he admitted he wasn’t. “I’m wearing this uniform in solidarity with our boys in Afghanistan,” Walker said. Do we really need to see people pretending to be a soldier in order to show solidarity with our armed forces?.
Simply put this is a rather cheap stunt by the BNP to give the impression to the ordinary voters that the British Armed Forces actually support the BNP in any great numbers. The BNP also have ex-forces people standing as candidates for them, yet it seems even they didn’t want to be Nick Griffins soldier of the streets, at least they still show respect for the uniform.
Something for Adam Walker and the BNP to think about before he continues to strut around in a military uniform:
A quote from the Uniforms Act 1894, which is still very much in force:
3. Penalty for bringing contempt on uniform.
If any person not serving in Her Majesty’s Naval or Military Forces wears without Her Majesty’s permission the uniform of any of those forces, or any dress having the appearance or bearing any of the regimental or other distinctive marks of any such uniform, in such a manner or under such circumstances as to be likely to bring contempt upon that uniform, or employs any other person so to wear that uniform or dress, he shall be liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding [F3 level 3 on the standard scale], or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding one month.

@ Vote No To The BNP in 2010

Labour 1923 & 2010 VS Mao

Beneath the veneer of the Conservatives' people power

What these slick PR operators are really offering is deep cuts, lower taxes for the rich and sweeping Thatcherite privatisation
David Cameron's Conservatives are nothing if not accomplished PR professionals. And the Big Society theme running through today's manifesto launch is a brilliant presentational sleight of hand, which takes their political cross-dressing to new heights.
To hear Cameron and Hague carrying on this morning about people taking "collective" control of their own lives, the right to recall MPs, set up their own schools, elect police commissioners and create co-ops in the public sector, you could almost imagine the Tories had leap-frogged over Labour into Hugo Chavez land.
By any measure, it's a clever political branding exercise, which recognises the progressive political climate and gives a "people power" veneer to what — once you strip away the rhetoric and mood music — is in reality a classic Thatcherite anti-state programme for sweeping privatisation.
Who, after all, isn't frustrated by the corporate managerialism of public services and wouldn't be attracted by greater democratic involvement in how they're delivered (even if some balk, Oscar Wilde-style, at the committee meetings)? It's a seam Labour could have successfully mined for its own campaign if it had been a bit braver.
But look at the small print and the prospect of popular control turns out to be a mirage. Take "free" schools. It's not just that they'll be a marginal gimmick for better-off parents with sharp elbows to snaffle shrinking resources.
Through joint ventures and corporate chain sponsorship, they are also clearly intended to be part of a much wider privatisation of education — for profit, as Michael Gove made clear over the weekend. That will mean less control of schools and the curriculum for most parents than they have now.
Something similar applies to public sector co-ops – not a proposal the Tories are making for the private sector, of course, where they would have a hugely positive impact. And when it comes to MPs' recall, it turns out to be restricted to cases of "proven wrongdoing", rather than when electors simply demand a new representative.
For the rest, there were no significant new pledges today, no clarity on the cuts Cameron and George Osborne have already made clear will be faster and deeper than Labour's. Instead, the phoney war on national insurance was at full tilt and the commitment to concentrate the biggest tax giveaways (through raising the inheritance tax threshold to £1m) on the richest families in the country unswerving.
As in 1979, the 2010 Conservative manifesto has left out the most far-reaching changes a Tory government is likely to make. From what we know so far, those look to be the deepest spending cuts since the 1930s, lower taxes on the wealthy and the mass privatisation of public services.
Seumas Milne @'The Guardian'

China earthquake kills hundreds in Qinghai

Tory social care policies will hit the poor hardest