Tuesday, 29 June 2010

Civic Centre Cuts Protest

We had a demo at the Civic Centre this evening, before the meeting of the full council; against the cuts to public services which have been announced.

Cuts Demo
In response to the Chancellor’s Emergency Budget announcement on Tuesday, Green Councillor Rob White said:
"We are gravely concerned to see so many wide-ranging cuts to public spending from the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats. The effects of today’s announcement will have a massive impact on local government and communities, as we warned a few weeks ago.

"The enforced freeze on council tax is a crude attempt by central government to shift the blame for soon-to-be disappearing public services onto local government. Not only is the Government desperate to avoid criticism for their own ruthless economic policy, but they’re limiting the flexibility for local councils such as Reading to be able to manage fairly the cuts central government is demanding.

"We are asking the local Conservatives and Liberal Democrats ‘What public services will you throw away? Education? Care? Housing?'.

"We need to fight these cuts which will hit the most vulnerable hardest. To do this we need a broad coalition locally and nationally. This demonstration will bring people together in Reading and kick start the fightback."

2005 Demo Pics Me As Tony Blair

This evening I dressed as PM David Cameron. The last time I did this I was Tony Blair. As this happened in 2005, long before I blogged, I thought I would revisit these old pics.

Me As Tony Blair

Tiger Bush & Blair

It was a bit of street theatre organised by local climate campaigner John Hogett. Theres a Tiger representing Esso, I am Tony Blair, and Louise as George Bush (though the mask looks like Nixon). I think we all drowned due to rising sea levels.

Tories Go Tebbit

Tebbit was famous for saying get on you bike to find a job. Actally he ddn't quite say that, he referred to his dad doing this, but thats how it was taken.

So IDS said people should be able to travel to find work, which for many will remind them of Tebbit. They buttered up the policy, saying it wasnt forced, but the implication will be if you are unemployed its your fault.

So we have some areas with huge housing pressure and job oppertunities. And other areas with few oppertunities, crying out for investment. As the ConDems wont invest, the tactic seems to be blame the poor. What is needed is some planning, invest in job opertunities in the areas that need them the most.

Speaking of bikes, why not invest in building bike lanes. As well as insulating houses & renewable energy. Reduce Carbon and unemployment while investing in a better future.

Sunday, 27 June 2010

Luddite Blatter

Watching the football today, it became aparent that there is a man determined to keep things in the last century. Other sports let the ref see video footage, refs are human, they can make mistakes.

At the moment everyone watching will know a mistake is made, but there is no way to change the descion. Everyone saw Lampard score a goal, but as the ref didnt see it live, it wasn't allowed. So fouling, cheating, anything is ok as long as the ref doesn't see.

So who is the man responsible? Sepp Blatter, President of FIFA. He has a history as a Luddite. He was elected president of the World Society of Friends of Suspenders, an organisation who tried to stop women replacing suspender belts.

'Germany's far younger and more cohesive team was much better than England's and deserved the win that puts it into the quarterfinals. Lampard's un-allowed goal should not mask the fact that England had a poor World Cup. England has wonderful players who play in the world's toughest league but yet, as a national team, it cannot be taken seriously as a soccer power. Capello has failed in his lavishly paid job to change that enigma.'

There are alo rumours Blatter is corrupt, time for a new President. I understand Tony Blair is available. Only joking, he is busy saving the world.

I had a look at the FIFA website, its very poor. The information is on there but it takes some searching.

I don't follow football much, and I have only heard of the players when the tabloids scream abuse at them. So it was interesting to see them as people playing football, not monsters. Frankly I am not interested in the personal life of sportspeople, or politicians or celebrities. But newspapers seem to need them to sell copies. I suggest people stop bying papers with such rubbish on the front page. I prefer to get my news online anyway, its more up to date, and does not involve sutting down trees.

Quidditch World Cup

Its not quite the game Harry Potter plays, but Quiddich has taken off in the muggle world. There is no flying, but a combination of dodgeball, basketball & tag.
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The bludgers are used like dodgeball, the Quaffle is a volleyball, the snitch is a sock stuffed with a tennis ball. So the chasers play voleyball, the beaters dodgeball, the keeper guards the hoops and the seekers plays tag. Sounds a mite confusing.

Its played around the world, USA, Canada, Australia.

Like the other world cup, football, Quiddich started in England. But I'm not sure its been played here yet.



Meanwhile in South Africa the World Cup continues.

With all the talk of cutbacks, I wonder how few are mentioning the Salary of the England manager. Fabio Capello gets £6 million a year, his predecessors got half that. Then theres the Olympics, why not cut some of the excess there, and leave things like education alone.


Sir Alf Ramsey got £7,500 in 1974. Don Revie was subsequently appointed on £25,000 a year as salaries for managers gradually rose over the next two decades. Terry Venables was understood to be on around £150,000 as England manager in 1996, followed by Glenn Hoddle on approximately £250,000 and then Kevin Keegan on an estimated £650,000. This changed with Sven-Goran Eriksson who was paid £2 million when first appointed in 2001. Steve McClaren got £2.5m-a-year.

For an International Comparison:
- Fabio Capello (England): 9,900,000 USD/year
- Marcelo Lippi (Italy): 4,100,000
- Javier Aguirre (Mexico): 4,000,000
- Joachim Löw (Germany): 3,300,000
- Berter van Marwijk (Netherlands): 2,700,000
- Ottmar Hitzfeld (Switzerland): 2,600,000
- Vicente del Bosque (Spain): 2,200,000
- Carlos Queiroz (Portugal): 2,000,000
- Pim Verbeek (Australia): 1,820,000
- Carlos Parreira (South Africa): 1,800,000
- Dunga (Brazil): 1,250,000
- Diego Maradona (Argentina): 1,200,000
- Takeshi Okada (Japan): 1,200,000
- Ricki Herbert (New Zealand): 1,200,000
- Otto Rehhagel (Greece): 1,150,000
- Paul Le Guen (Cameroon): 960,000
- Marcelo Bielsa (Chile): 850,000
- Vahdi Halilhodzic (Cote d’Ivoire): 740,000
- Raymond Domenech (France): 720,000
....
- Shaibu Amodu (Nigeria): 180,000

Saturday, 26 June 2010

Bus Stop Mismanagement

Its seems the Labour Cllrs were so inept that when they changed the bus shelter contractor, and the new contractor had a lead time of several months before any replacements shelters arrived. Both the LD and Cons have been blogging about this. The LD say:
"Just before the (bus stop) contract ran out, they (Lab) tendered for a new contract and awared it to a new company. Sadly the contract allowed them to pick up their bus stops for all over the town without any reference to the new company that apparently cannot start operating until all the old bus stops have been removed. Only when can they start installing new bus stops."

This is beyond barmy. But where was the scrutiny by the opposition parties? LD Cllr Duveen says "I sincerely hope that the new contract does not have the same pig’s ear of a mess when it eventually runs out." Does he not know how to be a Cllr? Its not done just by guessing and hoping, get the contracts checked.

Thankfully we no longer have to rely on the three old parties, now the Greens have a Cllr, we can have some real opposition to their bad practises.

In Wokingham I have seen some solar powered bus stops. Can we have some of those. solar bus stop

Lemon Tree

Just saw an interesting film about Israel/Palestine.

The Isaeli Defence Minister moves in next door to a Palestinian Widow, his security want to cut down her Lemon Trees. Those trees are all she has, her family have flown the nest, she and her late father before her have been caring for them for 50 years. She goes to the courts to try and prevent the destruction, but the dice are loaded. I don't want to say to much more in case it spoils the film.

I think this neighbour dispute is a metaphor for the larger I/P conflict. If they can't live next to each other in peace, then can the country have peace?

But I thought of a solution for them. The Israeli minister could rent the lemon grove from the widow while they live there, she won't have acess but will have an income. They get a safety barrier and some nice lemons. In the long term she will get her grove back when they leave. They would have to look after the trees though.

Unfortunately I don't think this solution will sort out all of Israels problems though.

The film was nicely done, showed both sides as human. Many of the characters were all too human, including a misogynist Palestianian politician.

The wall that has grabbed land and cut off the West Bank is shown as a solution that is almost as bad as the problem. It separates the people, but the cost is huge, people divided.


Eran Riklis is becoming quite a feminist! It must be because his writing partner is a Palestinian woma

Suha Arraf (writer) Suha Arraf – writer. Born in 1969 in the village of Mi'ilya to a Palestinian family. Got her BA degree in Philosophy and Literature at Haifa university

The Israeli director Eran Riklis is also cowriter with the Palestinian Suha Arraf.

Eran is interviewed here




The film starts with the widow preparing the Lemons with Chilies and Salt. I found some recipies on the internet.

Pickled Lemons are found all around the Mediterranean and each family has its own traditional recipe. Here are a few:


Preserved Lemons
Ingredients - to make one jar of lemons
* 5-6 Lemons - to fit a large clear jar
* ½ kg salt
* 1 Cinnamon stick
* 6 whole Cloves
* 3 Chillis, thinly sliced
* ¼ cup olive oil
* Spring water - to fill the jar

Method
1. Wash the lemons and slice them up to within 2cm of each pointed end.
2. Put 1 tablespoon salt into the large sterilized clear jar.
3. Put in the lemons and press them down. Fill the jar up with spring water, leaving enough space for the olive oil.
4. Add salt, cinnamon, cloves and chillies.
5. Cover the top with oil and seal the jar. The oil is to seal and protect the lemons from contact with the air.
6. Leave the lemons in a cool dry and dark place for 4-6 weeks before using.

Tips
They can now be used whole or chopped, using both the pulp and the now softened rind. At times you may see a white cloudiness on the lemons, this is harmless and will be washed off with the salt before use. The lemons don’t need to be refrigerated after opening, but it’s a good idea to put another thin layer of oil on the top to keep the air out. Preserved lemons can be kept for up to a year, they’re a great way to keep lemons and add a delicious piquancy flavour to any dish.


Pickled Lemon Slices
Some lemons are pickled sweet-and-sour, with sugar, vinegar, salt, and cinnamon. Others are sweet, not suitable for cooking with meat but meant to be eaten like candy. The following recipe is an adaptation of a recipe that appears in a book written at the end of the 12th century C.E. by Saladin's personal physician. Choose juicy, glossy, unblemished lemons.

ingredients
1 cup coarse (kosher) salt
8 lemons, scrubbed very clean
2 small chillis
2 bay leaves
10 allspice berries
10 coriander seeds


method
1. Sprinkle 2 or 3 tablespoons of salt into each canning jar.
2. Slice 5 of the lemons and all the chillis.
3. Pack the lemon slices into the jars. Add a few bay leaves and sliced chillis as you go.
4. Squeeze the remaining lemons and strain the juice. Pour juice into the jar, finishing with spring/mineral water to completely cover the lemons.
5. Add the allspice berries and coriander seeds.
6. Cover the top with a little olive oil.
7. Seal the jars. Turn jars upside down briefly once a day if possible to distribute the contents evenly. After 2 weeks, store lemons in a cool, dry place; they will keep for up to a year unopened. They can be used after two weeks, if desired. Once opened, they must be refrigerated.


Pickled Lemons
makes about 2 1/2 cups
It is best made a couple of weeks ahead.

1 pound thinly sliced lemons
2 small chillis, cut into paper-thin rings
2 tablespoons pickling spices (see Note 1 at end)
1 cup cider vinegar (see Note 2)
2 tablespoons distilled white vinegar (see Note 2)
1/4 cup plus 1 tablespoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt (see Note 3)

1. Cover the sliced lemons with boiling water. Let steep for 2 minutes, stirring to separate the slices. Drain and immediately plunge into icy water to stop the cooking; drain well. Put the lemons into the pickling jar and add the chillis and pickling spices.

2. Combine the remaining ingredients in a non-aluminium pot and bring the mixture to a boil over moderate heat, stirring occasionally.

3. Once the mixture boils. Let the mixture cool to room temperature, uncovered.

4. Store in the refrigerator, in a clean container, sealed airtight. Serve cold or at room temperature.

Note 1: : pickling spices are a mixture of: cinnamon, mustard seed, bay leaves, allspice, dill seed, cloves, ginger, peppercorns, coriander, juniper berries, mace, and cardamom. For a hotter mix, add some crushed hot peppers. Each family has their own combination of these, not necessarily using every single spice.

Note 2: there are big flavor differences among brands of vinegars. Heinz vinegars, both white and apple cider, always come out ahead in our taste tests.

Note 3: only kosher salt has the necessary light/clean/mild flavor for successful pickling. Ordinary table salt tastes acrid and sea salt is too salty. (in the UK Malvern table salt is a good replacement for kosher salt)

Friday, 25 June 2010

Oops Wokingham Council

Well anyone can make a mistake.
It seems the election results on the Wokingham Council Website for the European Parliamentary election South East has one tiny party with 2,500,000,000,000,000,000 votes. Now the world population is only around 6,697,254,041 so I suspect this may not be correct.

Woky

Thursday, 24 June 2010

Shock New Woman PM In Australia

Australia gets 1st woman PM after shock party coup.

Welsh-born lawyer Julia Gillard became Australia's first woman prime minister Thursday after the once hugely popular Kevin Rudd fell to a party coup less than three years after taking office.
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"I asked my colleagues to make a leadership change because I believe that a good government was losing its way... and at risk at the next election," Gillard said. "I was not going to sit idly by."

Gillard, 48, pledged to seek a popular mandate within months, and set about reversing the issues that sank Rudd by pursuing a dropped carbon trading scheme and urging mining chiefs to cancel a TV campaign against a planned new tax. The plea drew immediate dividends as BHP Billiton, the world's biggest mining company, cancelled its TV ads as a "sign of good faith".

But analysts raised questions over the manner of her ascension, which came through shady backroom deals hatched by political power-brokers and ended in a hasty dismissal for Rudd, elected by a landslide in 2007.

Rumblings of a leadership change surfaced only late on Wednesday, when Rudd emerged from talks with Gillard to announce the surprise parliamentary party vote on Thursday morning.

Analysts were stunned at the fall from grace of Rudd, who plummeted from record support levels to become the first Australian prime minister deposed in office since Labor's Paul Keating unseated Bob Hawke in 1991.

Rudd was not "assassinated" over any great policy question. Unlike the Liberal Party’s decision to tear down Malcolm Turnbull over an emissions trading scheme and replace him with Tony Abbott, there was no big policy struggle between Rudd and his deputy. Gillard was a party to every major decision of the Rudd government.

According to some of her key supporters, the deciding factor was the front-page report in The Sydney Morning Herald that day that revealed Rudd’s chief of staff had been quietly testing support for Rudd within the party. Which implied that although Gillard had been steadfastly loyal, Rudd did not trust her public assurances. That breach of good faith fired the spark of anger to move Gillard to challenge her leader.

In 2006 she joined with Kevin Rudd to wrest the leadership of the party from Kim Beazley. The "marriage of convenience", as it was dubbed at the time, delivered the Labour Party a win at the 2007 election, ending 11 years of Liberal rule. The victory also handed Ms Gillard the deputy prime ministership, a role which she excelled in. As Mr Rudd's fortunes waned, Ms Gillard continued to perform, winning a fight with the teachers' union and securing fans from all corners of politics. Soon the leadership questions began.

In May, Peter Beattie, the former Queensland premier, said that Ms Gillard would make a "brilliant" prime minister. Mr Rudd was unfazed, saying that his deputy would make a fantastic prime minister "one day". That day has arrived faster than he could have imagined. She has named Nye Bevan, the former Welsh Labour leader, as one of her political heroes.

The rapid developments even stunned Gillard's family, which emigrated from Wales in 1966. "I knew that she would be a performer as a participant in the arena,
and that she would be formidable and that she would certainly rise,"
father John Gillard said. "But I never thought she would rise to the position of prime minister. But there we are, that's what happened."

As well as being the first female prime minister, she is also Australia's first non-married leader. Ms Gillard is in a long-term relationship with Tim Mathieson.

Wednesday, 23 June 2010

Budget "VAT bombshell"

Before the election the Liberal Democrats accused the Conservatives of planning a "VAT bombshell" costing every family £389 a year to pay for tax "bribes".



Yesterday the ConDems did just that. How do the LD justify this? "I am not too happy about 20 % VAT but it has to happen, I guess." Well I guess many people who voted LD will be very angry.
VAT


“Swingeing cuts were neither unavoidable nor fair” says Green MP Caroline Lucas.
Commenting on the “budget for pointless austerity,” the UK’s first Green MP Caroline Lucas said:
“In spite of the Chancellor’s protestations, this budget was neither unavoidable nor fair. Instead it was a massively failed opportunity to shift the economy onto a fairer, greener pathway.

“Devastating public spending cuts of the sort announced today are not ‘unavoidable.’ They are not an economic inevitability – they are an ideological choice.

“Nor was this budget fair. A VAT rise, benefits cuts for all, a public sector freeze, and swingeing cuts in most government budgets of 25%, will all of them hit some of the poorest hardest.”

“We need a Green New Deal – a major investment package to rapidly modernise the UK economy for a low-carbon future, while seeing off the recession through large-scale job-creation. That’s the kind of policy the new government should have put centre-stage.”

Vote Blue, get Blue

Caroline Lucas concluded:
“Any notion that by voting Blue you get Green was nailed today by the stark absence of any serious measures to promote urgently needed environmental measures.”

A-Z of why these cuts are mad
Why the budget is not fair
A "budget for pointless austerity"
Video no shock doctrine for Britain

Conservatives Little List

The Conservative Conference in Brighton in 1992, Peter Lily did a parody of The Mikado, itemising those whom the Lord High Executioner of the Welfare State wished to eliminate:

I've got a little list
Of benefit offenders who I'll soon be rooting out
And who never would be missed
They never would be missed
There's those who make up bogus claims
In half a dozen names
And councillors who draw the dole
To run left-wing campaigns . . .
Young ladies who get pregnant just to jump the housing list
And dads who won't support the kids of ladies they've just kissed
And I haven't even mentioned all those sponging socialists

Was this a prediction of yesterdays ConDem budget?
Hattip Gaian Economics

Sunday, 20 June 2010

UN Says World's richest 1% own 40% of all wealth

In the USA last year "The richest 1 percent have more financial wealth than the bottom 95 percent combined." Michael Moore on Tuesday, September 29th, 2009 in a news conference in Washington, D.C

The richest 1% of adults in the world own 40% of the planet's wealth, according to the largest study yet of wealth distribution. The report also finds that those in financial services and the internet sectors predominate among the super rich.

Richest 2% of adults in the world own more than half of global household wealth according to a study released today by the World Institute for Development Economics Research of the United Nations University (UNU-WIDER). The Bottom 50% Own 1%. Wealth is heavily concentrated in North America, Europe, and high income Asia-Pacific countries. People in these countries collectively hold almost 90% of total world wealth.



Europe, the US and some Asia Pacific nations account for most of the extremely wealthy. More than a third live in the US. Japan accounts for 27% of the total, the UK for 6% and France for 5%.

The report found the richest 10% of adults accounted for 85% of the world total of global assets. Half the world's adult population, however, owned barely 1% of global wealth. Near the bottom of the list were India, with per capita wealth of $1,100, and Indonesia with assets per head of $1,400.

"These levels of inequality are grotesque," said Duncan Green, head of research at Oxfam. "It is impossible to justify such vast wealth when 800 million people go to bed hungry every night. The good news is that redistribution would only have to be relatively small. Such are the vast assets of the rich that giving up a small part of their wealth could transform the lives of millions."

Madsen Pirie, director of the Adam Smith Institute, a free-market thinktank, disagreed that distribution of global wealth was unfair. He said: "The implicit assumption behind this is that there is a supply of wealth in the world and some people have too much of that supply. In fact wealth is a dynamic, it is constantly created. We should not be asking who in the past has created wealth and how can we get it off them." He said that instead the question should be how more and more people could create wealth.

Ruth Lea, director of the Centre for Policy Studies, a thinkthank set up by Margaret Thatcher, said that although she supported the goal of making poverty history she did not think increasing aid to poorer countries was the answer. "It's no use throwing lots of aid at countries that are basically dysfunctional," she said.

During the Age of Reason, Francis Bacon wrote "Above all things good policy is to be used that the treasures and monies in a state be not gathered into a few hands... Money is like muck, not good except it be spread."


I fear this is what Cameron means by the 'Big Society'; cut aid and leave the poor to charity. Sounds a bit Victorian, return to the poorhouse.


See 'The Spirit Level' (Why Equality is Better for Everyone) by Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett. The Greater London Assembly recently passed a motion proposed by Assembly Member Darren Johnson, to limit pay ratios within the GLA and associated bodies to 1:20 - with a long term goal of reducing them to 1:10. See a short film here.

This is budget week in the UK, expect cuts to services. The Chancellor has confirmed that he will announce his Budget statement on Tuesday 22 June at 12.30pm

Saturday, 19 June 2010

Bike Week 2010 Reading Events

This year Bike Week takes place from 19 to 27 June 2010, Reading Cycle Campaign will be involved in the events below. Further details and the rest of the events to be held on Bike Week can be found on their website - http://www.readingcyclecampaign.org.uk

Sunday 20 June - Reading Cycle Festival
Reading's annual Cycle Festival will be held at Prospect Park. Reading. It's free and runs from 10:00 to 17:00.

Wednesday 23 June - Reading Cycle Campaign Ride & Curry
There will be a led ride to the Blue Cobra in Theale. Meet 19:00 at Wagamama's, Oracle Shopping Centre. The Blue Cobra in Theale has a special banquet night, Starter, Main and a side for £9.95. Please contact RCC to confirm numbers with the restaurant. webmanager 'at' readingcyclecampaign.org.uk ('at' = @)

Saturday 26 June - Bike Week Promotional Stands in Broad Street
From 12:00 to 16:00, various stands including Reading Cycle Campaign will be on display in Broad Street.


Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/ReadingCycleCampaign
Twitter - http://twitter.com/ReadingCycle

I have been doing more cycling in the last month than ever before, partly as I now live near Route 4 so its much safer. Its a great way of getting to know the surrounding area, be out in the glorious weather and get a bit fitter. Today I cycled to Sindlesham to see the Winnersh Fair, about 14 miles. Thats the furthest I have ever been on a bke.

Cut Tax Abuse, Not Jobs

On Monday 21 June Britain’s first Green MP is to issue a new report – 'Cuts: the callous con trick' – in which she will make the case that cuts are unnecessary “because the economy could instead be rebalanced using additional tax revenues.”

The report, written jointly with tax expert Richard Murphy and Colin Hines of Finance for the Future, condemns the government “for failing to the electorate the option of fair tax instead of cuts,” and accuses ministers of increasing the likelihood of a double-dip recession.

Green Party leader Caroline Lucas MP said:
“Whilst these appalling losses to the nation’s coffers are occurring, HM Revenue & Customs are pursuing a programme of job cuts which will ultimately reduce their own staff by 20,000 – close to one quarter of the total. This makes absolutely no sense. This programme should be reversed, staff re-employed, and local tax offices re-opened in order to tackle tax abuse. It has been calculated that at least £15 billion of extra tax could be collected each year as a result. That could prevent a massive range of cuts."

Richard Murphy, tax expert, chartered accountant and co-author of the report said:
“Our report sets out a range of additional options for changing the tax rules for the UK so that more than £40 billion of additional taxes could be raised each year by the end of the life of this parliament. That, together with the tax collecting efficiency savings already noted, would together deliver more than £60 billion of tax revenues for the UK – so preventing the need for any cuts at all.”

Who benefits from cutting back on tax collection? Tax avoiders. Yet our big three parties talk endlessly and direct polict to benefit cheats, a target the tabloids seem to prefer.

The amount of Tax avoidance and evasion is “truly staggering” – it could be as high as £100bn a year.

The report can be read at: www.financeforthefuture.com/TaxBriefing.pdf.

Weekend Events In Reading

On Saturday Alder Bridge Steiner school is having an open day from 10.00- 12.00.

Photobucket
In Reading we have Waterfest / Forbury Fever. And at 3pm at on the bandstand the very wonderful and excellent La Mort
Subite are playing - see http://manband.org.uk/friends/lamortsubite for
a taste of their music.
Come along and be entertained by traditional music and dance throughout the day, whilst taking in the beautifully painted narrow boats along the towpath. Also why not visit the Water Fest 'craft avenue' where you can browse among the hand-made products and visit Riverside Walk where you can visit the many charity information stands the run along the towpath.
Forbury Fever is in Forbury Gardens where you will be entertained by traditional dance and folk inspired music on the special Water Fest stage throughout the afternoon

Over the whole weekend there's the 10th annual Whiteknights Artists'
Studio Trail www.studiotrail.co.uk, and in the lovely garden of 85 Christchurch Rd (just opposite the parade of shops near the University main entrance) there is a bar serving refreshments and
raising money for Breast Cancer Care and the Berkshire Cancer Centre.
* The Ridgeline Trust who will be opening their Therapeutic Wildlife Garden to show work from Redlands and Alfred Sutton Primary Schools.
* The Fine Art Department of the University of Reading are staying open for our weekend so you can view their Final Year Degree Show.
* Music@Reading will perform their Summer Concert in the Great Hall, University of Reading on Saturday 19 June.




Winnersh Fair at Bearwood Recreation Ground and Winnersh Community Centre in Mole Road, Sindlesham, from 12.30pm to 4.30pm. Games, stalls and entertainment will be among the fun activities on offer at Winnersh Village Fete on Saturday.



And on Sunday evening at the Rising Sun at 7pm there's a concert featuring
* Andi Neate (Her voice ranges from powerhouse to wistful sweetness; her
music draws from folk, rock and jazz... and a touch of gospel.)
* Idle Words (Jazz singer and guitar accompaniment)
* Los Pajamos (The Manband's Wayne on vocals, Gordon on guitar - see
http://manband.org.uk for some of these musicians' other work).

Friday, 18 June 2010

BP Backlash

The USA Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee met yesterday for a hearing on "The Role Of BP In The Deepwater Horizon Explosion And Oil Spill," a satisfying occurance for outraged Americans who have watched millions of gallons of oil flow unchecked into the Gulf of Mexico for eight weeks and counting.

The headlining act during the hearing was BP's CEO Tony Hayward, an executive that has appeared in the media many times during this ordeal, often uttering phrases some considered damaging to the company.

This public rebuke was broken only by Republican Joe Barton of Texas, who seemed to think that although they facilitated the worst environmental disaster in American history, BP has endured enough. "I do not want to live in a country where any time a citizen or a corporation that does something that is legitimately wrong is subject to a shakedown," said Rep. Barton.

The "shakedown," Barton said, was President Obama's insistence that BP set up a $20 billion fund for claims filed by Gulf Coast victims; a fund that would be paid out without the oil giant's supervision. Barton, incidentally, has received $317,000 from the oil and gas industry donations since 2007. Most of the members on the committee have received a total of $1 million-plus since the start of last year $1.35 million since Jan. 2009. (CBS News).

During Haywards Testimony, some of his questioners were so passionate they wouldnt let him answer. It appeared they were playing to a domestic audience of their own voters. Some in Britain have even started to feel sorry for them, as though they are the scapegoat.

"Your answer 65 times that 'you don't know' doesn't leave us with confidence," snapped Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vermont.

One of the only straight answers Hayward promptly provided during the hearing led Rep. Mike Doyle, D-, Pa. to consider changing his career choice:

"My compensation last year was recorded, I think, at $6 million dollars," said Hayward. Those of you at the top don't seem to have a clue about what was going on on this rig. I'm sitting here thinking I could be the CEO of an oil company. It pays a little bit better than being a member of Congress," Doyle replied.

The only encouraging conclusion to come out of the hearing is the fact that BP's complete mishandling of the Gulf oil spill crisis is that it may support President Obama's demand that the MMS (Minerals Management Service) play a stronger role in regulating the actions of the oil industry, which in past years has been allowed to virtually regulate itself.

In Britain we see have been comparing this to other disasters such as Bhopal, Torrey Canyon, Piper Alpha and Amoco Cadiz, caused by USA companies.

Some people are saying that Trasnocean and Haliburton got off lighlty by comparison, see them criticized in Congress here and by Obama here.

It's worth noting than in the US Gulf of Mexico, blowouts are not rare occurrences: the US Minerals Management Service has investigated 18 blowouts and 13 "loss of well control" incidents since 1983, several involving fires and fatalities. In 1992, the Greenhill Petroleum blowout and fire sent 70,000-120,000 gallons of oil into Timbalier Bay, Louisiana. Blowouts happened twice in 2007, and the most recent loss of well control was in 2008. And many more, less-serious, incidents can be found here.

Lets not forget the republicans slogan "Drill, Baby, Drill" that some are now questioning. Others are using this as an oppertunity to push for renewables.

Reduce Emissions, Change The Clocks

Everybody loves the sunshine, but right now we set our clocks so that we get less of it in our lives than we could. For big parts of the year, most of us sleep through hours of sunlight in the mornings and then use expensive and energy-hungry electric lighting to keep out the dark nights.

By moving Britain's clocks forwards by one hour throughout the year, we could brighten up our days with an average of 55 minutes of extra useable sunlight each day. Not only that, research shows that it would cut at least half a million tonnes of CO2 emissions every year, save lives on our roads and give a boost to sport, leisure and domestic tourism. What's more it's practically free and it could happen right away.

Changing our clocks so that we are awake for more of the time that the sun is out is a no-brainer. That's why I've added my voice to the growing movement calling for the next government - whoever they may be - to launch a three-year experiment to put the theory to test.

Join me and the thousands of other supporters of the Lighter Later campaign at www.lighterlater.org.

This has been a guest post by the 1010/Age of Stupid team.

Thursday, 17 June 2010

No More Oil In The USA

In the last few days Obama has made a speech about reducing the USA dependence on foriegn oil. I can remember his predececcor Bush saying much the same. On John Stewarts Daily show they found the last 8 presidents had all made the same speech. But for one of those men, it wasnt just empty talk.
Carter Solar White House

In 1979, Jimmy Carter, in a forward-looking move, installed solar panels in the roof of the White House. This symbolic installation was taken down in 1986 during the Reagan presidency. In 1991, Unity College, an environmentally centered college in Maine acquired the panels and later installed them on their cafeteria.

In "A Road not Taken", swiss artists Christina Hemauer and Roman Keller travel back in time and, following the route the panels took, interview those involved in the solar panel decisions, in the oil crisis of the time, and in the way that that moment presaged our own era. The documentary essay is still in work and will be about 70 minutes long.


"I think the symbolic nature of this exceeds the actual kilowatts produced," said SEIA spokesman Michael Paranzino.

That was probably the case during the energy crisis of the 1970s, when President Jimmy Carter donned a sweater, turned down his thermostat --and had a solar-powered water system installed. It was later removed by President Ronald Reagan, who shipped the panels off to Unity College in Maine, where they still heat the water for the school's cafeteria.

Obama can now put solar panels back on the White House roof. That’s the thrust of a citizen action campaign called “Globama,” led by the solar energy company Sungevity, which has offered to donate and install a photovoltaic array on the White house at no cost to the Obamas or to taxpayers.


Jimmy Carter left office with a poor reputation thanks to the 52 U.S. captives held at the U.S. embassy in Iran, taken after their revolution. Carter was followed by Reagan who the USA right wing love, but as can be seen by his actions, he got it wrong. Reagan wanted economic growth by cutting government spending, reducing government regulation of the economy, and instituting tax cuts (much like Thatcher). Many still see him as one of their greatest Presidents! And Cameron/Clegg are following in this tradition, as have Labour. So the rich get richer, and the poor suffer.

Tuesday, 15 June 2010

Keith Taylor, Our New MEP

Keith Taylor has become an Green MEP following the historic election of Caroline Lucas as the country’s first Green MP. He has the Greens' seat in the European Parliament for the next four years representing South East England.
Keith

The MEP positions are awarded using proportional representation against the regional list each party agreed at the last election (2009). Caroline was number one on the list and he was number two, so as Caroline cannot be both MP and MEP the Brussels post is offered to the next in line without the need for a by election.

I have resigned as a Brighton & Hove councillor, thus prompting a by election for my St Peter’s & North Laine seat where I know our talented candidate Lizzie Deane will excel at representing her constituents.

The last eleven years as a Green councillor have been enormous fun and a life-shaping experience, and my deepest thanks go to my partner Lizzie and my family, my colleague councillors past and present, and the hundreds of members without whom none of our shared success would have been possible.

As new MEP for South East England I will be a member of the Parliament's committees on International Trade, Petitions and Transport & Tourism. Additionally I'm part of the delegations to Afghanistan, Iran and Palestine. I will also co-chair an Intergroup on opposing supermarket domination, and work around Roma rights and mental health issues.

You can keep up to speed with what I'm doing and get all my contact details by visiting my new website on www.keithtaylormep.org.uk.

Over the next four years until Euro elections 2014 I will try to;
• Make a positive difference to the region, striving to promote sustainability and strong local communities
• Fight for fairness and equality
• Help build on the numbers of elected Greens here working closely with local parties and the SE Confederation, so that electing two MEPs in 2014 is a real possibility

As I take up my new job I travel to Brussels with the same intent as I entered B&H Council as a rookie councillor 11 years ago – to make a positive contribution to enhance people’s lives, to bring citizens closer to their elected representatives and where necessary, to challenge the assumptions that society cannot change for the better.

Caroline Lucas MP, who served in the European Parliament for over ten years, said:

“Keith is an outstanding politician, a highly respected party member, and a good friend. He has served the people of Brighton & Hove with passion and commitment for many years and will bring a wealth of experience to his new role in the European Parliament.

“I have no doubt that Keith will prove to be an excellent MEP for the South East region, and I wish him every success for the future.”

Loddon Bridge Disaster 1972

On the 26th October 1972 the 329M bridge over the Loddon collapsed, whilst under construction. It resulted in 3 deaths and ten injuries, at the time it was of national interest, but now its all but forgotten. I could see no plaque there, but there should be one.

Loddon Bridge

It is timely to look at how health and safety has inproved over the years as the ConDems are looking at changing this.


From the 'Wokingham Times', 26th October 1972:
‘Digging for dear life . . .’ Reporters: Malcolm Deacon, Quentin Falk, Eileen Sheridan, Ian Soutar;
Like so many ants, rescue workers swarm over the wreckage feverishly searching for survivors. Every now and then there is a pause as they listen for cries from the injured. But there is silence except for the drone of generators as fire engines pump out brown, murky water to reduce the level of the river. So the search continues.

This was the scene at the Loddon Bridge disaster on Tuesday when three men died and 10 were brought out injured after being trapped in the tangled mesh of girders, rods and splintered wooden frames. Hundreds of tons of concrete, wood and steel had crashed 40ft down when the span between two concrete pillars was on the point of being cemented.

One of the injured men, his face white, drawn and tired, his head wrapped in a swath of bandages, his clothes covered in blood sits in a waiting car. Shocked as she was, Mrs. Guntrip still managed to make tea for helpers. "I’ll never forget what I saw", she said.

During the morning there were some 40 men working on the span, but it was lunch-time when the disaster struck and half of them were having their lunch-break. Mr. Tom Murphy of Finchampstead Road, Wokingham, was near the canteen 75 yards away. He heard the crash and turned round in time to see the span hit the water. His brother Joe was one of the men working in the other shift and was slightly injured as the scaffolding plummeted down.

As the alarm was raised at 1:15, every available ambulance in Reading was ordered to the scene. They were soon joined by ambulances from Bracknell and Wokingham until over 20 were ready.

In the canteen on the site, roll calls were taken. A group of men, covered in mud and grime, answered as their names were called. There were embarrassed coughs and nobody dared look at each other as the foreman called out a name and there was no reply. A cross was put by the name and the foreman read on.

The ambulance man were soon joined by firemen from Reading, Wokingham, Sonning and Pangbourne. Said one fireman, "God – it looks like a scaffolder’s nightmare". Said another – if there’s anyone down there he can’t have much of a chance.
Loddon Bridge 1972

Nearby, women neighbours valiantly started making cup after cup of strong, sweet tea and weary rescue workers snatched time off for quick breathers. The whole area around the bridge had been churned up by the hundreds of pairs of feet trampling around and soon became a sea of mud.

The collapse happened when tons of liquid concrete was being poured into the bridge "false work" – a temporary bridge of steel piles and girders. After the concrete has set, the falsework is taken away and a bridge of concrete is left.

This falsework had previously been used on the west-bound bridge at the beginning of August and was due to be moved along the river to help construct the lower slip road.

Microfilm copies of these newspapers can be viewed at both Wokingham and Bracknell Libraries.

On Reading Forum people remember the event, Roads near the hospital were cleared to help ambulances.

Now the area is well known for flooding.

Sunday, 13 June 2010

Nigeria's agony dwarfs the Gulf Oil Spill

This article by John Vidal first appeared in the Observer, Sunday 30 May 2010

The Deepwater Horizon disaster caused headlines around the world, yet the people who live in the Niger delta have had to live with environmental catastrophes for decades.

Many hundreds of 40-year-old pipelines that crisscross the Niger delta had corroded and spewed oil for several months.

Forest and farmland were now covered in a sheen of greasy oil. Drinking wells were polluted and people were distraught. No one knew how much oil had leaked.

"We lost our nets, huts and fishing pots," said Chief Promise, village leader of Otuegwe and our guide. "This is where we fished and farmed. We have lost our forest. We told Shell of the spill within days, but they did nothing for six months."

That was the Niger delta a few years ago, where, according to Nigerian academics, writers and environment groups, oil companies have acted with such impunity and recklessness that much of the region has been devastated by leaks.

More oil is spilled from the delta's network of terminals, pipes, pumping stations and oil platforms every year than has been lost in the Gulf of Mexico, the site of a major ecological catastrophe caused by oil that has poured from a leak triggered by the explosion that wrecked BP's Deepwater Horizon rig last month. That disaster, which claimed the lives of 11 rig workers, has made headlines round the world. By contrast, little information has emerged about the damage inflicted on the Niger delta. Yet the destruction there provides us with a far more accurate picture of the price we have to pay for drilling oil today.

On 1 May this year a ruptured ExxonMobil pipeline in the state of Akwa Ibom spilled more than a million gallons into the delta over seven days before the leak was stopped. Local people demonstrated against the company but say they were attacked by security guards. Community leaders are now demanding $1bn in compensation for the illness and loss of livelihood they suffered. Few expect they will succeed. In the meantime, thick balls of tar are being washed up along the coast.

Within days of the Ibeno spill, thousands of barrels of oil were spilled when the nearby Shell Trans Niger pipeline was attacked by rebels. A few days after that, a large oil slick was found floating on Lake Adibawa in Bayelsa state and another in Ogoniland. "We are faced with incessant oil spills from rusty pipes, some of which are 40 years old," said Bonny Otavie, a Bayelsa MP.

This point was backed by Williams Mkpa, a community leader in Ibeno: "Oil companies do not value our life; they want us to all die. In the past two years, we have experienced 10 oil spills and fishermen can no longer sustain their families. It is not tolerable."

With 606 oilfields, the Niger delta supplies 40% of all the crude the United States imports and is the world capital of oil pollution. Life expectancy in its rural communities, half of which have no access to clean water, has fallen to little more than 40 years over the past two generations. Locals blame the oil that pollutes their land and can scarcely believe the contrast with the steps taken by BP and the US government to try to stop the Gulf oil leak and to protect the Louisiana shoreline from pollution.

"If this Gulf accident had happened in Nigeria, neither the government nor the company would have paid much attention," said the writer Ben Ikari, a member of the Ogoni people. "This kind of spill happens all the time in the delta."

"The oil companies just ignore it. The lawmakers do not care and people must live with pollution daily. The situation is now worse than it was 30 years ago. Nothing is changing. When I see the efforts that are being made in the US I feel a great sense of sadness at the double standards. What they do in the US or in Europe is very different."

"We see frantic efforts being made to stop the spill in the US," said Nnimo Bassey, Nigerian head of Friends of the Earth International. "But in Nigeria, oil companies largely ignore their spills, cover them up and destroy people's livelihood and environments. The Gulf spill can be seen as a metaphor for what is happening daily in the oilfields of Nigeria and other parts of Africa.

"This has gone on for 50 years in Nigeria. People depend completely on the environment for their drinking water and farming and fishing. They are amazed that the president of the US can be making speeches daily, because in Nigeria people there would not hear a whimper," he said.

It is impossible to know how much oil is spilled in the Niger delta each year because the companies and the government keep that secret. However, two major independent investigations over the past four years suggest that as much is spilled at sea, in the swamps and on land every year as has been lost in the Gulf of Mexico so far.

One report, compiled by WWF UK, the World Conservation Union and representatives from the Nigerian federal government and the Nigerian Conservation Foundation, calculated in 2006 that up to 1.5m tons of oil – 50 times the pollution unleashed in the Exxon Valdez tanker disaster in Alaska – has been spilled in the delta over the past half century. Last year Amnesty calculated that the equivalent of at least 9m barrels of oil was spilled and accused the oil companies of a human rights outrage.

According to Nigerian federal government figures, there were more than 7,000 spills between 1970 and 2000, and there are 2,000 official major spillages sites, many going back decades, with thousands of smaller ones still waiting to be cleared up. More than 1,000 spill cases have been filed against Shell alone.

Last month Shell admitted to spilling 14,000 tonnes of oil in 2009. The majority, said the company, was lost through two incidents – one in which the company claims that thieves damaged a wellhead at its Odidi field and another where militants bombed the Trans Escravos pipeline.

Shell, which works in partnership with the Nigerian government in the delta, says that 98% of all its oil spills are caused by vandalism, theft or sabotage by militants and only a minimal amount by deteriorating infrastructure. "We had 132 spills last year, as against 175 on average. Safety valves were vandalised; one pipe had 300 illegal taps. We found five explosive devices on one. Sometimes communities do not give us access to clean up the pollution because they can make more money from compensation," said a spokesman.

"We have a full-time oil spill response team. Last year we replaced 197 miles of pipeline and are using every known way to clean up pollution, including microbes. We are committed to cleaning up any spill as fast as possible as soon as and for whatever reason they occur."

These claims are hotly disputed by communities and environmental watchdog groups. They mostly blame the companies' vast network of rusting pipes and storage tanks, corroding pipelines, semi-derelict pumping stations and old wellheads, as well as tankers and vessels cleaning out tanks.

The scale of the pollution is mind-boggling. The government's national oil spill detection and response agency (Nosdra) says that between 1976 and 1996 alone, more than 2.4m barrels contaminated the environment. "Oil spills and the dumping of oil into waterways has been extensive, often poisoning drinking water and destroying vegetation. These incidents have become common due to the lack of laws and enforcement measures within the existing political regime," said a spokesman for Nosdra.

The sense of outrage is widespread. "There are more than 300 spills, major and minor, a year," said Bassey. "It happens all the year round. The whole environment is devastated. The latest revelations highlight the massive difference in the response to oil spills. In Nigeria, both companies and government have come to treat an extraordinary level of oil spills as the norm."

A spokesman for the Stakeholder Democracy Network in Lagos, which works to empower those in communities affected by the oil companies' activities, said: "The response to the spill in the United States should serve as a stiff reminder as to how far spill management in Nigeria has drifted from standards across the world."

Other voices of protest point out that the world has overlooked the scale of the environmental impact. Activist Ben Amunwa, of the London-based oil watch group Platform, said: "Deepwater Horizon may have exceed Exxon Valdez, but within a few years in Nigeria offshore spills from four locations dwarfed the scale of the Exxon Valdez disaster many times over. Estimates put spill volumes in the Niger delta among the worst on the planet, but they do not include the crude oil from waste water and gas flares. Companies such as Shell continue to avoid independent monitoring and keep key data secret."

Worse may be to come. One industry insider, who asked not to be named, said: "Major spills are likely to increase in the coming years as the industry strives to extract oil from increasingly remote and difficult terrains. Future supplies will be offshore, deeper and harder to work. When things go wrong, it will be harder to respond."

Judith Kimerling, a professor of law and policy at the City University of New York and author of Amazon Crude, a book about oil development in Ecuador, said: "Spills, leaks and deliberate discharges are happening in oilfields all over the world and very few people seem to care."

There is an overwhelming sense that the big oil companies act as if they are beyond the law. Bassey said: "What we conclude from the Gulf of Mexico pollution incident is that the oil companies are out of control.

"It is clear that BP has been blocking progressive legislation, both in the US and here. In Nigeria, they have been living above the law. They are now clearly a danger to the planet. The dangers of this happening again and again are high. They must be taken to the international court of justice."

See also biafra nigeria world, Washington Post and the film Age Of Stupid.

The article is also used at The root and ourworld

Eco Products Competition

Theres a few eco podicts on display in a competition take one small step.

A friend has recomended voting for this eco door flap that reduces drafts. You could just attach some old carpet above the flap though, it would do a similar job.

Have a look and vote for your favourite.

Reading 12 Table Tennis Stars From One Street

One street in Reading spawns 12 table tennis stars? In an extract from his new book, former Olympian Matthew Syed asks how?

Photobucket

Peter Charters Mr Charters was a teacher at the local primary school, a tall man with a moustache, a twinkle in his eye and a disdain for conventional teaching methods. He was the coach of almost all the after-school sporting clubs, the organiser of school sports day and inventor of a game called “bucket ball”, a kind of improvised basketball.

But Charters cared about one thing above all: table tennis. He was the nation’s top coach and a senior figure in the English Table Tennis Association. No child who passed through Aldryngton School in Reading was not given a try-out by Charters — and such were his zeal, energy and dedication to table tennis that anybody who showed potential was persuaded to take his or her skills forward at the local club.

At No 119 were the Syeds. Andrew, my brother, went on to become one of the most successful junior players in the history of British table tennis, winning three national titles before retiring due to injury in 1986. Matthew (that’s me) also lived at 119 and became a long-serving England senior No 1, a three-time Commonwealth champion and a two-time Olympian.

At No 274, just opposite Aldryngton, lived Karen Witt. She went on to win the Commonwealth championships and was widely considered one of the most brilliant female players of her generation.

At No 149, equidistant between the Syeds and the Witts, lived Andy Wellman. He was a top national player who won a string of titles, particularly in doubles.

Down at the bottom of Silverdale Road were Paul Trott, a leading junior, and Keith Hodder, an outstanding county player. Around the corner were Jimmy Stokes (England junior champion), Paul Savins (junior international), Alison Gordon (four times English senior champion), Paul Andrews (top national player) andSue Collier (England schools champion). I could go on.

For a period in the 1980s, this street and its immediate vicinity produced more outstanding table tennis players than the rest of the nation. One road among tens of thousands of roads; one tiny cohort of schoolkids against millions up and down the country. Silverdale Road was the wellspring of English table tennis: a ping-pong mecca that seemed to defy explanation or belief.

We like to think that sport is a meritocracy in which achievement is driven by talent and hard work, but it is nothing of the sort. Think of the thousands of potential table tennis champions not fortunate enough to live in Silverdale Road, with its peculiar set of advantages.



Saturday, 12 June 2010

Suggested Cuts ConDem

The ConDems are asking for suggestions on what to cut.

Start with nuclear weapons, subsidy of nuclear power, airport expansion and road building.

Intersting post by Craig Murray here suggesting we cut embassy staff within the EU.

Our Embassies in EU countries remain among the biggest and grandest we possess, reflecting the days when our shifting bilateral relationships with European nations were literally matters of life and death, war and peace. They are magnificent and madly over-staffed by crazily over senior people. They are a great relic of a bygone age, institutions so grand that their overwhelming presence masks their lack of purpose.

Be radical. Large Embassies in EU member states should be cut to eight diplomats (Paris, Bonn) small Embassies to four diplomats (Copenhagen, Dublin). Let's move into the 21st century.


Then theres the Queen. Do we really need so many palaces? I can understand a holiday home in Scotland. But even with that, theres a few that can be sold.

The Royal Residences
Buckingham Palace
The Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace
Windsor Castle
The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace
Palace of Holyroodhouse
Frogmore
The Queen's Gallery, Palace of Holyroodhouse
Balmoral Castle
Sandringham House
St James's Palace
The Chapels Royal
Clarence House
Kensington Palace

Then theres the house of Lords, cut most of them too.

Do not cut vital services, cut things we dont need; and let those who can afford it pay up.

Friday, 11 June 2010

BP Gulf Coast Vs UC Bhopal

Todays news is full of the BP oil spill in the Gulf coast, 50 days after the incident. Obama and the USA are making much of it being Britains problem, though BP is an international company 40% USA owned. And the contractors involved in the drilling were USA companies. The president has described the company as “British Petroleum,” a name it has not used for years.

Nick Clegg suggested that Barack Obama was engaged in a “tit for tat diplomatic spat” by employing anti-British rhetoric over the BP oil disaster. US president declared earlier this week that he was looking for “some ass to kick” following BP’s persistent failure to plug the Gulf of Mexico oil leak.

Contrast this with Bhopal. The world's worst industrial accident in 1984, Forty tonnes of a methyl isocyanate leaked from the pesticide factory killing 3,000 people in the Bhopal slums. There are now up to 25,000 people dead according to campaigners. Over half a million people effected by the disaster.

Some 25 years after the gas leak, 390 tons of toxic chemicals abandoned at the plant continue to leak and pollute the groundwater in the region and affect thousands of Bhopal residents who depend on it.

So after 25 years of trying to get justice there are finally some convictions for the the disaster at the Union Carbide plant. The eight Indian former plant employees are convicted of "death by negligence", they got 2 years and fines of £1,467.

But in the USA, no conviction of the US executives from Union Carbide. No help from the US any legal action against Warren Anderson former chairman of Union Carbide. As the Union Carbide boss, Anderson knew about a 1982 safety audit of the Bhopal plant, which identified 30 major hazards. Rather than fix them in Bhopal, only the company's identical plant in the US was fixed. Neglecting these hazards in Bhopal caused the deadly explosion.

Where is Obamas sense of outrage over this? He is responding to pressure over BP, but does he protest too much? He after all has done little to push for safety over drilling. BP in 2009 attracted the largest safety fine in US history, for failing to clean up its dangerous act. Wasn't this a warning that something was wrong with this corporate giant?

According to a report by the Center for Public Integrity, no other oil company inspected by OSHA since June 2007 is even close to BP in the number of citations issued for egregious willful violations (760). Sunoco Inc. was cited for 127 alleged violations, eight of which were willful. ConocoPhillips Co. was cited for 119, four of which were willful, and Citgo Petroleum Corp. for 101, two of which were willful. There are even questions about the safety of the cleanup operations.

What of the future? With peak oil we know that we should be looking for alternatives to oil, oil is so last year. Governments should foce oil companies to massivly invest in renewables.

Wednesday, 9 June 2010

Parliamentary Maiden Speeches

Watching some speeches on the identity documents bill. Not yet seen much debate on on identity documents though. There have been a series of maiden speeches to a near empty house.

They appear to be all about vanity. Praising there predecessor, mentioning features and history of their constituency.

Susan Jones (L) spoke about wearing bow ties and Rosa Parks.

Mike Freer (C) spoke about how much he loved Thatcher, to lots of Tory cheers.

Kris Hopkins (C) spoke against men and women being seperated in Muslim gatherings.

Ian Mearns (L) spoke about house elfs.

Alec Shelbrook (L) spoke about the old kingdom of Elmet

Nigel Adams (C) spoke of his love of beer and Cricket. And more interestingly the origin of the flag of the USA in Selby Abbey. He spoke up for Drax coal power station (the largest single source of emissions in the UK).

Gloria De Piero (L) spoke about D H Lawrence. I dont think she even mentioned i.d. cards.

Julain Huppert (LD) did speak about it, paying tribute to no2id. He decribed the Government as 'liberal and progressive'!


Even Labour members do little to defend I.D. cards, rather some have made the case that they were always against them. David Winnick (L) argued that the Tories were for them in the 1980's.

Even Caroline Lucas followed convention, but did it well and still made remarks relevant to the debate:
Caroline Lucas (Brighton, Pavilion, Green)
I am grateful to you for calling me to speak today, Mr Deputy Speaker. As I am sure you know, the environment is a subject dear to my heart, and I shall return to it in a moment.

I think that anyone would find making their first speech in the Chamber daunting, given its history and traditions and the many momentous events that it has witnessed. However, I have an additional responsibility, which is to speak not only as the new Member of Parliament for Brighton, Pavilion, but as the first representative of the Green party to be elected to Westminster.

We must go back several decades, to the election of the first nationalist MPs in Scotland and Wales, to identify the last maiden speech made by a member of a new national political party. Perhaps a better comparison would be with the first socialist and independent Labour MPs, whose arrival over a century ago was seen as a sign of coming revolution. When Keir Hardie made his maiden speech after winning the seat of West Ham South in 1892, there was an outcry, because instead of a frock coat and top hat he wore a tweed suit and a deerstalker. It is hard to decide which of those options would seem more inappropriate today.

What Keir Hardie stood for, however, seems much more mainstream now: progressive taxation, votes for women, free schooling, pensions, and abolition of the House of Lords. Although the last of those is an urgent task that is still before us, the rest are now seen as essential to our society. What was once radical, even revolutionary, has become understood, accepted and even cherished.

I am helped today by the admirable tradition that in their first speech to the House, Members should refer to their constituency and to their predecessor. David Lepper, who stood down at the election after 13 years' service as Member of Parliament for Brighton, Pavilion, was an enormously hard-working and highly respected Member whose qualities transcended any difference of party, and I am delighted to have the chance to thank him for his work on behalf of the people of Brighton.

It is also a great pleasure to speak about Brighton itself, or Brighton and Hove as the city is rightly called. It is, I am sure, well known to many Members, if only in connection with party conference time. My own party has not yet grown to a size that would justify the use of the Brighton Centre-although I hope that that will change before long-but I can tell Members who are not familiar with it that it is one of the United Kingdom's premier conference venues. There are also the attractions of the shops and cafés of the Lanes and North Laine, the pier, and, of course, the Royal Pavilion itself, which gives its name to the constituency. Beyond the immediate boundaries of the constituency and the city is the quietly beautiful countryside of the south downs and the Sussex Weald.

Brighton has always had a tradition of independence, of doing things differently. It has an entrepreneurial spirit, making the best of things whatever the circumstances, and enjoying being ahead of the curve. We see that in the number of small businesses and freelancers in the constituency, and in the way in which diversity is not just tolerated or respected, but positively welcomed and valued. You have to work quite hard to be a local character in Brighton.

We do not have a single dominant employer in the constituency. As well as tourism and hospitality, we have two universities, whose students make an important cultural as well as financial contribution to the city. A large number of charities, campaigning groups and institutes are also based there, some local, others with a national or international reach, such as the Institute of Development Studies. All those organisations do excellent work, and I look forward to supporting them during my time in this place.

Many of my constituents are employed in the public and voluntary sectors. They include doctors and teachers, nurses and police officers, and others from professions that do not always receive the same level of attention or support from the media or, indeed, politicians. But whatever role they play-as social workers, planning officers, highway engineers or Border Agency staff-we depend on them. I am sure that Members on both sides agree that all those who work for the state should be respected and their contribution valued. Particularly at a time of cuts, with offhand comments about bureaucrats and pencil-pushers, that becomes even more important.

There is also a Brighton that is perhaps less familiar to hon. Members. The very popularity of the city puts pressure on transport, housing and the quality of life. Although there is prosperity, it is not shared equally. People are proud of Brighton but they believe it can be a better and fairer place to live and work. I pledge to do everything I can in this place to help achieve that, with a particular focus on creating more affordable and more sustainable housing. We have more than 11,000 people on the housing waiting list in the city and we need urgent action.

Brighton was once the seat of the economist Henry Fawcett, who was elected there in 1865. Shortly afterwards, he married Millicent Garrett, later the leader of the Suffragists, a movement he himself had encouraged and supported. He lent his name to the Fawcett Society, which is still campaigning for greater women's representation in politics. The task of ensuring that Parliament better reflects the people it represents remains work in progress. As the first woman elected in Brighton, Pavilion, this is work that I will do all I can to advance. I pay tribute to the wide range of organisations in Brighton and Hove that work with women, which do some fantastic work. They include Rise, which works with women who have been subject to domestic violence.

I said when I began that I found this occasion daunting and perhaps the most difficult task is to say a few words about the latest radical move that the people of Brighton have made in electing the first Green MP to Parliament. It has been a long journey. The Green party traces its origins back to 1973 and the issues highlighted in its first manifesto for a sustainable society, including security of energy supply, tackling pollution, raising standards of welfare and striving for steady state economics, are even more urgent today. I cannot help thinking that if our message had been heeded nearly 40 years ago, we would be much closer to the genuinely sustainable economy that we so urgently need than we currently are today.

We fielded 50 candidates in the 1979 general election as the Ecology party and began to win seats on local councils. Representation in the European Parliament and the London Assembly followed and now, after nearly four decades of the kind of work on doorsteps and in council chambers with which I know hon. Members are all too familiar, we have more candidates, more members and now our first MP. A long journey; too long, I would say.

Politics needs to renew itself and to allow new ideas and visions to emerge. Otherwise, debate is the poorer and more and more people feel that they are not represented. I hope that if and when other new political movements arise, they will not be excluded by the system of voting. Reform here, as in other areas, is long overdue. That chance must not be squandered. Most crucially, the people themselves must be given a choice about the way their representatives are elected and that means more than a referendum on the alternative vote. It means the choice of a genuinely proportional electoral system.

Both before the election and afterwards, I have been asked the question, "What can a single MP achieve?" I may not be alone in facing that question. Since arriving in this place and thinking about the contribution of other MPs and what they have done over the years, I am sure that the answer is very clear. A single MP can achieve a great deal. A single MP can contribute to debates, to legislation and to scrutiny, work that is valuable if not always appreciated outside. A single MP can speak up for their constituents and challenge the Executive. For example, I am pleased that the Government are to introduce legislation to revoke a number of restrictions on people's freedoms and liberties, such as identity cards. But many restrictions remain; for example, control orders are to stay in force. Who is to speak for those affected, or for the principle that people should not be held without charge even if it is in their own homes? House arrest is something we deplore in other countries and I hope that, through debate, we can conclude that it has no place here either.

A single MP can raise issues that cannot be raised elsewhere. Last year, hon. Members from both sides helped to shine a light on the actions of the international commodities trading group, Trafigura, and the shipping of hazardous waste to the Ivory Coast. There was particular concern that the media in this country were prevented from reporting the issues fully and fairly. That remains the case, for new legal actions concerning Trafigura have been launched in the Dutch courts and are being reported widely in other countries but not here. Those are the kinds of issues I will hope to pursue.

Finally, I wish to touch on the subject of today's debate. I have worked on the causes and consequences of climate change for most of my working life, first with Oxfam, for the effects of climate change are already affecting millions of people in poorer countries around the world, and more recently for 10 years in the European Parliament. If we are to overcome this threat, we in this Chamber have a vital role to play. We must take the lead. We must act so the United Kingdom can meet its own responsibilities to cut the emissions of carbon dioxide and the other gases that are changing our climate, and we need to encourage and support other countries to do the same.

This House has signed up to the 10:10 campaign- 10% emission reductions in 2010. That is very good news, but the truth is we need 10% emission cuts every year, year on year, until we reach a zero-carbon economy, and time is running very short. If we are to avoid irreversible climate change, the current Parliament must meet this historic task. That gives all of us in this Chamber an extraordinary responsibility, but also an extraordinary opportunity, because the good news is that the action we need to take to tackle climate change is action that can improve the quality of life for all of us: better, more affordable public transport; better insulated homes; the end of fuel poverty; stronger local communities and economies; and many more jobs. I look forward to working with Members of all parties to advance these issues.

And later
Caroline Lucas (Brighton, Pavilion, Green)
My right hon. Friend says that the challenge of climate change is so great that we need nuclear power as well as renewables and energy efficiency, but given that we have to reduce our emissions in the next eight to 10 years if we listen to the scientists, we need to consider what is the most cost-effective and the fastest way to do that. Is nuclear power not a massive distraction in that debate? Even if we doubled the amount of nuclear power, we would cut our emissions by only 8%. Putting money into renewables and efficiency is far more effective.




This house needs reform.

BPA Wrecks Sex; Causes Breast Cancer, Obesity...

Guest post by Melissa Breyer. Its about the USA, but will apply here.

Certain things are hard to understand.

Chemicals Like bisphenol-A (BPA)–the industrial compound used in manufacturing polycarbonate plastic and epoxy resins, and contained in a wide variety of consumer products (baby bottles, plastic containers, the resin lining of cans for food and beverages, to name a few). People are exposed to BPA by using such products–one sampling in a CDC body burden study detected the chemical in 93 percent of those included.

Since at least 1936 it has been known that BPA mimics estrogens, binding to the same receptors throughout the human body as natural female hormones. Now does it really seem like a good idea to be using synthetic estrogen in commonly-used materials that allow it to leach into our bodies?

More than 100 peer-reviewed studies have found BPA to be toxic at low doses. Scientists have linked it to everything from breast cancer to obesity, heart disease to diabetes, attention deficit disorder to genital abnormalities in boys and girls alike. The FDA is just beginning to mumble “maybe just maybe we should think about conducting some further studies.” I’m sure it has been hard to come to this conclusion, given the millions of dollars spent on pro-BPA lobbying by the chemical industry.

Steven Hentges of the American Chemistry Council notes that Americans absorb quantities of BPA at levels that government regulators have found to be safe. But, “the vast majority of independent scientists—those not working for industry—are concerned about early-life low-dose exposures to BPA,” said Janet Gray, a Vassar College professor who is science adviser to the Breast Cancer Fund.

The rest of the article is here

But some highlights

Everyone is always scratching their head about the rise of disease, disorder, and dysfunction that is affecting our population, and the answers seem plain as day to me. Between environmental pollutants and the abysmal state of modern food, our bodies are coursing with chemicals–is the general rise in epidemics really that confounding?

The main culprits, aside from occupational exposure, are canned food and hard plastic food and water containers:

* Buy prepared foods in jars when possible–especially tomatoes and tomato sauce.

* Opt for fresh produce when you can, choose frozen produce over canned.

* Use dried beans instead of canned beans–they’re less expensive, easy to cook from scratch, and super awesome: read more about cooking beans here.

* Avoid canned soda and energy drinks.

* When possible it is best to avoid #7 plastics, especially for children’s food. Plastics with the recycling labels #1, #2 and #4 on the bottom are safer choices and do not contain BPA.

* Find baby bottles in glass versions, or those made from the safer plastics including polyamine, polypropylene and polyethylene. Bottles used to pump and store expressed breast milk by the brand Medela are labeled BPA-free.

* Soft or cloudy-colored plastic does not contain BPA.

* Many metal water bottles are lined with a plastic coating that contains BPA. Look for stainless steel bottles that do not have a plastic liner.

Museum of English Rural Life 'Spectacular' on Saturday 12th June from 10am to 5pm

In Reading the Museum of English Rural Life is having its biggest annual event, the MERL Spectacular takes place on Saturday 12th June from 10am to 5pm.

This year there will be an artistic theme to our biggest family event to tie in with the Looking at Landscape: colours and contours exhibition. Come along and find out how rural England has inspired artists. Join in the family workshops and get creative! Everyone will be able to contribute to a giant landscape weaving project - using plastic bags!

With craft demonstrations and activities, morris dancing, a fairground organ, traction engine, lunches and refreshments, there's something for everyone, so come along and enjoy the great atmosphere in the MERL garden! Admission is free!

You'll be able to come and see work by local artists and families can take part in fun activities, including family drawing workshops run by Korky Paul, award-winning illustrator of the Winnie the Witch children's books. You'll also be able to help create a landscape sculpture based on a design by artist, Julie Roberts.

We are also delighted to welcome Robin Wood, bowl turner and Chair of the Heritage Craft Association, who will be demonstrating his replica of the Lailey lathe which MERL curators chose as one of the objects to represent Berkshire in the BBC's History of the World project. Also on the HCA stand you will be able to meet Sophie Lister Hussain, the glass mentor from the BBC's recent Mastercrafts series and have a go at chair caning.

For details visit the website

Stalls and activities

* Local watercolour artist group
* British Trust for Conservation Volunteers
* MERL's modern & Victorian allotments
* Traction engine
* Oxfam books
* RISC, including drop-in craft activities
* CPRE
* Heritage Crafts Association
* R&J Nickless Beekeepers with observation hive
* Country Markets
* WI
* Reading & District Fuschia Society
* Face painting


The Museum's exhibition gallery is a light, open space teeming with objects and designed to draw out some comparisons between village-based society of a century ago and our globalised, high-tech and perhaps unsustainable world of today.

Monday, 7 June 2010

Oil On Trobled Waters

In the current situation in the Gulf of Mexico, Oil is the last thing we want poured on the water, However I thought I would look at the meaning of the phrase.

In earlier times, the pouring of modest quantities of oil into the sea was done deliberately in order to forestall rough seas. This phrase alludes to the calming effect of that oil has on wave action as it spreads over the surface of the sea. Very small quantities of oil can cover a surprisingly large area as it spreads into a layer just a few molecules in thickness. The surface tension of the oil layer has an effect similar to that of a thin skin and is highly effective at calming 'troubled' water. The calming effect of oil was known to the ancient Greeks
.

You can get peace oil produced in Israel by Jews, Arabs, Druze and Bedouin working together.

Other troubles waters in recet weeks are those around the Gaza strip. Much has been written on this already. I find it interesting what is said by Aljazeera, who had a journalist on board the ship.

Jamal el-Shayyal, Al Jazeera's correspondent who was on board the Mavi Marmara from the beginning of its voyage, said "Not less than 24 hours before Israel attacked I was granted access to all areas of the ship to see whether there were any unwanted people or weapons on board," he said. "There was nothing of this sort on the boat."

The Law of the Sea is discussed here, written by a professor of international law.
A maritime blockade is for security purposes only, and must allow humanitarian assistance to the civilian population. Since the ships sailing for Gaza were on a declared humanitarian mission, those on board had the right to expect that any humanitarian goods would ultimately find their way to their intended recipients. On the other hand, having announced its blockade, Israel had no obligation to take the ships’ crew at their word as to the nature of the cargo. The blockading party has the right to fashion the arrangements, including search at a nearby port, under which passage of humanitarian goods is permitted. San Remo specifies that this inspection should include supervision by a neutral party to prevent the unwarranted seizure of humanitarian supplies and the abuse of humanitarian assistance by the blockaded party.


Meanwhile in Reading there was a shooting last night, half a mile from my home. A man is in a stable condition in hospital after being shot in what police believe was a targeted attack. A LibDem blogger quotes 'six gunshots were heard'. A Labourite says 'a shot was fired. As far as I could find out there were no fatalities. Fortunately as I was on the spot I was able to reassure passers by about the general safety of the area and that this appears to have been a one off incident.' How does he know this I wonder? He says nothing about our gun laws, as they were passed by Labour.

In 2004 there was a similar incident up the road at Cemetery Junction. In 2008 in Caversham, and again earlier this year.

Gunshot wounds in the Reading area increased despite a national decline in figures, according to the Reading Evening Post in 2009. Nine patients were admitted to Royal Berkshire Hospital in 2007/8, three more than in 2006/7 when the number dipped to six, contrasting with the 10 per cent decline nationally. The previous year 2005/6 that figure was one higher with seven gunshot wounds recorded.

So not isolated incidents, but a pattern of violence. We should be looking at our gun laws again, and at the laws around soft drugs. Those who have read about prohibition will know that making something illegal can drive it into the hands of criminals. The United States added the prohibition of alcohol to their Constitution in 1919. Some 13 years later, after teaching millions of citizens to casually break the law and turning scattered poorly organized criminal gangs into a powerful syndicate (the Mafia), the whole experiment was called off.

Under labour we have increased binge drinking & gambling. And many many new laws.

We should learn from history, and not repeat the mistakes of the past.