i wonder if certain powerful men in Ottawa have read
this?
Sri Lanka: Groups Decline to Testify Before Flawed Commission
Government War Panel Lacks Mandate, Credibility, Independence
posted by scott neil at 2:21 PM
from that Globe and Mail piece noted on one's Twitter earlier today: "Thailand has not signed onto the international conventions that can make refugee removals time-consuming."
but of course!
Thailand's neighbours only include such paragons of virtue as the Myanmar junta and the Laotian dictatorship.
in addition, the likes of
Vietnam and China are nearby. (and Sri Lanka, granted.)
time time time, we are very busy and pressed for time, we are professional people, we do not have
time for all this.
posted by scott neil at 5:33 PM
political language decoded: when wealthy, (relatively) powerful governments such as Canada or Australia use some sort of variation on a 'Tamil boat crisis' or such, they are in fact discussing a virtual handful of bedraggled Sri Lankans fleeing who knows what.
in a slightly less imperfect world, the word "crisis" would be reserved for momentous events causing widespread social upheaval, such as the genuine villainy that was what Margaret Thatcher did to much of central and northern Britain in her time in office.
posted by scott neil at 9:05 AM
STAY HYDRATED
concerned about the deeply pernicious Tory lies taking root in the UK about Labour's handling of the economy ('everything is Labour's fault' etc), and with so many willingly credulous dicks propping up the UK press corps and giving these lies an easy ride, it's got to be worth lauding when someone stands up and challenges such ludicrous falsehoods.
so, then, with such lies abroad, Brian Barder fisks "six Tory myths"
here.
elsewhere: Spotify, thank you for Solomon Burke (
RIP), for Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers with Thelonious Monk, and for the Pearson Sound tunes Wad (the longer 5 minute + version that is news to me), and Indelible. oh and the Brownswood Recordings compilation Brownswood Electr*c.
i want to go mental on a dance floor to Wad.
should and probably could have got in with a beautiful young woman in a pub last night but am moving city on Wednesday, so didn't really see the point.
you learn more from a few
Private Eye columns in one afternoon than an entire month of mainstream British journalism, swear it.
posted by scott neil at 9:52 PM
street paper
The Big Issue has a column that interviews celebrities about advice for their younger selves. writer AL Kennedy and actress Sadie Frost have been two particularly affecting ones of late.
among other things, Kennedy noted
I'd like to tell my 16-year-old self - don't go out with predatory men. They are less interesting than you think while Frost admitted
I wish I could go back and be more gentle, more compassionate with my dad. I had a very difficult relationship with him. I didn't understand his illness - he had manic depression, he was undiagnosed hepatitis C and he had issues with alcohol. He was very unconventional and larger than life and I was very unsure of him and neither of us could connect very well. I think my love and validation would have really helped him. I only came to grips with it all after he died and that has haunted me because I think I broke his heart.
posted by scott neil at 6:49 PM
apparently the World Bank estimate more than 800 million Indians get by on £1.26 a day (that's roughly 2 Canadian bucks or 1.45 euro at current rates).
yesterday i travelled on a coach from London to Manchester, 200 miles or so a trip, a fairly long journey by the standards of geographically small Britain, which is smaller than many states in the USA.
i was with my brother's partner in the morning and we had a central London food court breakfast (which is obviously going to be expensive by the standards of many wealthy nations, let alone in absolute terms), that i shouted.
i had a bagel with cream cheese, and a flat white and a bottle of a fruit smoothie, and she had an egg sandwich and a flat white.
all this was about ten pounds. ten pounds before 9 in the morning, and then i later got on a coach that cost about five pounds for a return journey (a cheap price by the standards of much British inter-city public transport travel, to be fair: because i have an internet connection where i live and a laptop, and can search for cheaper prices - very lucky).
15 quid by lunch because i have the immense good fortune to be a particular middle-class Briton with money to spare.
what luck.
all because of an accident of birth.
i suppose this somewhat self-aggrandising anecdote just goes to show that small-state conservative politicians in the wealthy world are the enemy, because they do not acknowledge that the good fortune of some of us which is built on the structurally sustained bad fortune of others (so therefore, no accident, in truth) must be remedied by more state intervention on capital than has been the case.
posted by scott neil at 10:23 AM