Archive for March, 2011

Rev Dr Brian Crowe Perved on Office Junior

In the Rectory of the Bizarre Reverend

Image via Wikipedia

I’m not sure what to “perv on an office junior” means – although the Sunday Life, apparently, is telling us today.

The Reverend Doctor Brian Crowe sex scandal in laid bare (literally) in all its detail today.  This must surely be a sub-editor’s paradise story – a holier-than-thou pseudo-intellectual politico and ordained minister exposed as hypocrite and sex fiend.

Northern Ireland’s new normal political landscape is becoming littered with sex scandals.  Fundamental questions need to be asked about how sex and sexuality are removed from our public discourse.  Crowe and his UUP/DUP buddies have stifled debate about such issues as the extension of the Abortion Act to Northern Ireland or the disgraceful levels of teenage pregnancy here (in the context of poor provision of public information about contraception).

Meanwhile, here’s a quote from today’s Sunday Life…

Creepy Crowe, a Stormont special adviser, sent the lobbyist at the centre of the “sex for access” scandal a string of indecent photographs of himself — most of them too crude to publish in a pornographic magazine, never mind a family newspaper.

Our censored photographs are two of the less graphic images which disgraced Dr Crowe sent to the lobbyist who caught him boasting he could deliver political favours for sexual favours.

Corporation Tax and Growth

I’m delighted that the Treasury has now cleared the way for Northern Ireland to strike its own corporation tax rate. The announcement was made yesterday and today the Welsh are making noises that they want to be able to set their own corporation tax rate – even if it means a reduced block grant.

I don’t hold out too much hope that there is enough strategic vision in the ranks of the DUP/Sinn Fein Partnership Executive (mostly fiscal lefties) to guarantee a rate reduction any time soon. But at least the Treasury has offered the opportunity to the Executive.  We’ll see how long it takes for it to realise that it is an opportunity to be seized.

Corporation tax is one of the nastiest and most regressive taxes. It actively militates against investment and entrepreneurship.

As for the block grant I’d hope that the Executive actively considers axing pointless, costly and badly run quangos like the NI Consumer Council.  That will go some way, at least, towards covering the cost of the block grant reduction.

Sex, Hypocrisy, Christians and the UUP

Richard Dawkins at the 34th American Atheists ...

Dr Brian Crowe of the UUP didn't approve of my sharing a platform with Professor Richard Dawkins (pictured). Image via Wikipedia

I have to admit to being naturally drawn to stories about the Ulster Unionist Party making a public arse of itself.  But the (Rev) Brian Crowe story is almost too much.

I first met Dr/Rev Brian Crowe in the very earliest days of the “negotiations” between the UUP and the Conservative Party. In those days he was Head of Policy for the UUP. He claimed to be a policy wonk and talked a lot about the CDU in Germany.  We didn’t hit it off.  I don’t think he liked me.

But it was some time later that we “met” online.  I don’t spend a lot of time on Facebook – I rarely update my status. However, any time I visited it appeared that Brian Crowe was there. He reminded me of an Aunt of mine (dead now) who used to spend a lot of her time in Woodsides department store in Lisburn for no obvious reason.

But on one occasion (Dr/Rev) Brian and I got into an exchange. He took exception to the fact that I’d once shared a platform with Professor Richard Dawkins and he felt the need to put me right on my atheism.  The trail, I can’t find, but I believe his argument was that Atheists were hypocrites – we were little different to religious fundamentalists.

I pointed out, of course, that Atheists didn’t tell people how to live their lives or to lay down strict moral standards – it was all about reciprosity and ensuring we adhered to a common, decent humanity. But he took issue with this and argued that morality was why we needed Christianity. Christian morality, according to Dr Brian, was what made modern democracies.

I don’t claim to be the most moral person on the world but hopefully I have picked up a wee bit of morality without too much exposure to religion, or scriptures or moral hectoring – my upbringing helped. Perhaps Dr Brian was less lucky. But every time a hypocrite falls I do get some guilty pleasure.  Wrong I know. But enjoyable all the same.

Ambition, Identity and Competition: An Education Challenge

Picture of Harland & Wolff David and Goliath c...

Image via Wikipedia

I’ve had quite a flurry of correspondence since my post yesterday about Dawn Purvis’ report and working party looking at underachievement in working class Protestant areas of Belfast. Some people take exception to me supporting a selection based system (despite the fact that it produces the best GCSE and A Levels results in the UK and the highest level of social mobility in the UK).  Others believe that Comprehensive systems are more equitable (despite the fact that they produce the worst form of inequality – good schools only available to children of parents who can afford to pay the fees).

In my view the problems in working class areas of Northern Ireland in terms of educational under-achievement is explained, largely, by three things:

  • The failure of parents to instil educational ambition in their children (itself the result of lack of education) as evidenced by poor participation in post-primary selection tests
  • A parochial definition of identity and culture that is counter-intellectual (and sees education as a threat to identity)
  • A non-competitive attitude to education (a perception that an academic focused education is best left to the toffs)

In short, the problem of under-achievement by these working class communities is the fault of the communities themselves – not society’s fault or even the fault of politicians.  Moreover, Protestant/Loyalist tribal “culture” militates against modern-mindedness and free thought – important attributes, I’d suggest, in an increasingly global and interconnected society.

My challenge to Dawn Purvis and her working party is to create some structure, some body, some thing that seeks to reverse the lack of ambition, the parochial definition of identity and the non-competitive attitude to education. If such a body is put in place (and it doesn’t require the government or the Executive to put it in place) I may be even willing to lend a helping hand (if it’s wanted).

Educational Underachievement and Dawn Purvis

Belfast, Irlanda del Norte

Image via Wikipedia

There is almost certainly some truth in Dawn Purvis’ Working Group’s assertion that kids from Protestant working class areas do less well at school than kids from other communities. However, Ms Purvis’ working group has not come up with any definitive recommendations. Rather, the report is more of a rant.

This is as close as it gets to making a recommendation:

Given the sensitivity of inter-communal competition within Northern Ireland, it is not the intention of this working group to enter into, or promote, any sort of “zero sum” competition for scarce resources. Rather, it is the “shine alight” on a developing problem, one that could – in time – cause instability for the political arrangements. More important, we suspect that tackling poor performance more prevalent in one community will lend lessons of a more general nature for all.

This direct quote (complete with grammatical errors) illustrates the problem with groups of this nature – no one member has the intellectual gravitas or courage to suggest a solution.

[Note: since writing this post this morning a more recent version of the document has been published].

Ms Purvis, herself, previously represented and led a political party that was a mouthpiece for Protestant paramilitary organisations that have – like their Republican counterparts – leeched on poverty-stricken sink estates.  Drug running, racketeering, punishment beatings are their stock in trade.  For three years Ms Purvis led the PUP but then resigned because of its relationship with the UVF.  However, this was a relationship Ms Purvis was well aware of for years.  Why did it take her so long to resign from the organisation and distance herself from it? Why did she join it in the first place? Why did she represent this political party for years at Stormont? And why, now, does she ignore the role that the UVF and other thug gangs play in stifling the chances of young, poverty stricken children of ill-educated parents to escape the ghettos into which they were born?

Ms Purvis and most of her self-appointed working group’s members, no doubt, are opposed to academic selection. On yesterday’s Politics Show she was at pains to point out that she expected “Unionist politicians” to invest an equal amount of effort in addressing the underachievement in Proddy areas problem as they invested in the issue of academic selection. She has made clear in the past that she opposes selection.

And yet, ironically, academic selection is the ticket out of the ghettos for so many young people born into sink estates (I know, because I was born into one – but was encouraged by my parents to pass my 11+).

The fact is that Grammar schools – regardless of where they are located – are open to all children regardless of the class or religion they are born into. And yet the reason so many children from deprived areas do not get the advantage of a grammar school education is precisely because so few children actually take the entrance tests. Few took the ‘official’ 11+ selection tests. I’d imagine that fewer still take the new centralised grammar school selection tests.

Therefore, to all intents and purposes, the situation that exists in poverty-stricken parts of England also applies here. For the children of most poor families, all that is on offer by way of post-primary education is the local secondary school (AKA the local comprehensive).  Some secondaries, it has to be said, perform brilliantly against all odds.  But, unfortunately, many don’t.

Moreover, the primary schools in the most deprived inner city areas do not prepare the children adequately for a post-primary education. If, at least, parents encouraged their young children to excel at primary school – in the hope that they may gain entry to Grammar School – the overall levels of numeracy and literacy would improve. That is the remarkable thing about a selection based system – it encourages ambition. And yet, in so many poor, inner city areas – as Ms Purvis herself acknowledges – there is no ambition on the part of parents or their offspring.

Northern Ireland sends more children from poor backgrounds to university than any other part of the UK – precisely because we are the only part of the UK that has no substantial post-primary fee paying sector. Access to some of the finest schools in the United Kingdom is open to all who can achieve the necessary standards for entry. However, I acknowledge that more could be done to remove other barriers to entry. For some poor families the cost of uniforms can be a problem – or the additional fees required from certain grammars.  However, this is an obvious area where community groups could help support families in the greatest need. But I’d imagine that this type of activity is not what Ms Purvis has in mind when she talks of action from “Unionist politicians”.

As Brian Feeny pointed out yesterday on the Politics Show, part of the reason why the NI Executive has been so useless, and so incapable of making decisions, is because so many MLAs themselves are ill-educated and economically illiterate. They, themselves, only get energised on the subject of education when the middle classes tell them to. I know from personal experience (as I was involved to an extent when I was involved in the Conservative Party) that MLAs and MPs were plagued by hordes of outraged middle class parents (of all religions) when it was suggested by Sinn Fein ministers, that academic selection be scrapped.

The middle classes are well aware that cheap, wonderful education is a big deal. Unfortunately, this message hasn’t made it to Dawn Purvis’ estates.  It’s about time Ms Purvis started arguing the case for the working classes playing the middle classes at their own game.

Religious Charities to be Exempted from Scrutiny?

Logo of the Northern Ireland Executive

Image via Wikipedia

One of the site’s readers and frequent commenters, Lew, has spotted a bit of jiggery-pokery at Stormont that appears to have slipped under the media radar. He and I think it deserves some attention.

“Northern Ireland proposes end to public benefit test for religious charities”

According to this piece religious charities operating in Northern Ireland might not have to prove that they provide a public benefit in order to keep their charitable status.  The Charities Act (Northern Ireland) 2008 says that all charities must prove they operate for the public benefit.

But last month the Northern Ireland Executive asked the Department for Social Development to draft legislation that would reintroduce a presumption of public benefit for religious organisations and possibly for charities that address poverty. The legislation will have to be introduced to the assembly before 7 March in order for it to be passed before the assembly is dissolved in advance of the general election in May.

Given the wealth of research that suggests religious charities discriminate in the provision of their services and in the people they employ, I think public attention should be drawn to this.  Moreover, as was made clear by the recent Hazel Stewart court case, people who claim to have profound religious faith can also behave in depraved ways – justifying it or seeking forgiveness on the basis of their faith.

Therefore, the presumption that religious charities always operate for the public good is, in fact flawed.  Religious charities – like secular ones – should be subject to the same processes of scrutiny.

Therefore I’d ask that you write to your MLA (here’s a full list) and ask for their position on this legislation and urge that they vote against a change in the law.


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Musings on things political and secular…

This is my site where I share my world views for anyone who might be remotely interested. Visit only if you think the content is interesting. Oh and comment is free. So go right ahead and agree or disagree. But, please, be kind and polite (especially to me).
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