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Independent Left: Irish Anarchists and the Left August 17, 2020

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Conor Kostick of Independent Left, former member of the SWP, and Kevin Doyle, a long time anarchist, former member of the Workers Solidarity Movement (WSM), in conversation about the question of how socialists and revolutionaries in Ireland – and beyond – should organise in order to be effective. And how Irish anarchists can contribute to answering this question.

ILA Podcast: No 3: Catherine Stocker, Social Democrats August 17, 2020

Posted by Aonrud ⚘ in Irish Left Online Document Archive.
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Direct download:

In this episode we talk to Catherine Stocker  of the Social Democrats. Catherine is a local councillor in Dublin City. She has been a member of the Social Democrats since 2016, and since then has been involved in policy formation, sat on the National Executive of the party, and in 2019 was elected to Dublin City Council for the Clontarf LEA.

We discuss her experience of joining and building a new political party, policy formation, working with other parties in the repeal referendum campaign, and her experience as a local councillor.

Left Archive: Sexual and Reproductive Health Policy Document – Social Democrats, 2018 August 17, 2020

Posted by Aonrud ⚘ in Irish Left Online Document Archive.
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Social Democrats - Sexual and Reproductive Health Policy Document

To download the above please click on the following link: Sexual-and-Reproductive-Health-Policy-4

Please click here to go the Left Archive.

Many thanks to the person who forwarded this to the Archive.

This policy document from the Social Democrats is the first example from the party to be added to the archive. Formed in 2015 by Independent TDs Catherine Murphy and Stephen Donnelly (who later left to join Fianna Fáil), and former Labour TD Roisín Shortall, the Social Democrats since built to hold six Dáil seats, and 19 local council seats.

This Sexual and Reproductive Health policy document dates from just before the repeal of the 8th amendment in 2018. The document opens:

The World Health Organisation (WHO) defines health as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being. The WHO recognises that the concept of health refers to far more than just the absence of disease or infirmity. It includes reproductive health, or sexual health, and addresses the reproductive processes, functions and system at all stages of life. The definition recognises that reproductive health refers to one’s ability to conduct a responsible, satisfying and safe sex life. Inherent in that are the rights of people to choose if and when they reproduce. In order to vindicate those health rights, it is incumbent on a society to provide information on and access to safe effective, affordable and acceptable methods of fertility regulation and to appropriate healthcare services that will enable people to go safely through pregnancy and childbirth maximising the likelihood of a healthy birth.

Unsurprisingly the party present a clear position in favour of repeal of the 8th amendment, and provision of abortion services:

The Social Democrats strongly support the holding of a referendum to repeal the 8th Amendment to the Constitution and will campaign strongly in favour of a repeal vote.

[…]

We will advocate for legislation which allows termination on request up to 12 weeks gestation, which would be provided within the public healthcare system. After this 12 week period, we believe legislation should allow terminations on the advice of medical professionals where the mental and/or physical health of a woman is at risk or where there is a fatal foetal abnormality.

It also positions abortion within the wider context of reproductive health and choice, calling for better healthcare provision for infertility and maternity care, and more accessible contraception (“The Social Democrats believe that contraception should be: Affordable; VAT exempt; Readily available”).

It further calls for a more complete sexuality education programme:

The Social Democrats advocate the drawing up of a holistic comprehensive sexuality education programme that is age-appropriate and that integrates key components such as:

• Body positivity
• Gender identity and gender expression
• Relationships
• Sexual orientation
• Fertility
• Consent awareness and sexual rights
• Sexual and reproductive health
• Sexual pleasure
• STI Education and prevention
• Safety on social and digital media in the context of sexuality

Please note: If files have been posted for or to other online archives previously we would appreciate if we could be informed of that. We always wish to credit same where applicable or simply provide links.

Back-up solutions August 16, 2020

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Uncategorized.
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Anyone had the unpleasant sinking feeling you get when an external hard drive which you back-up files to falls off a desk? I’ve had that experience twice this year. The first when the drive was in operation and hooked up to a computer and where it failed outright once it hit the floor. The second only the other day when one fell to the ground perhaps fourteen inches onto a fake wood floor. It wasn’t on and survived to tell the tale – at least to judge from Apple’s diagnostic suite. Not that I’ll ever entirely rely on that drive again.

But I’ve found myself getting a lot more cautious about back up solutions in the last decade or so. From being something that I airily dismissed as necessitating only a high capacity USB with my most ‘important’ files to – having had a computer fail on me – and losing files through simple neglect (perhaps most stupidly picture files from research I had done), I’m now near paranoid with two 4TB drives that I back-up to regularly – at least once a week. Now in truth part of that is due to remote working and the need to be absolutely 100% on top of things but even before that I was getting more rigorous.

Still, the reason I bring this up is that drive that fell 14 inches or so. Anyone had that experience? I’m presuming the fact it wasn’t in operation was the key determinant for it surviving, that and sheer luck?

Cottagecore? August 15, 2020

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Uncategorized.
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Huh? Recently the creature offered the opinion that the interior of a house was brilliant because it was a cross between cottagecore and minimalism. WTF? I’d never heard of cottagecore, but it is most definitely a thing. Apparently it celebrates traditional skills and crafts…

According to wiki it is

 ..related to similar nostalgic aesthetic movements such as grandmacore, farmcore, goblincore and faeriecore.[1]  According to its proponents, the ideas of cottagecore can help to satisfy a popular desire for “an aspirational form of nostalgia” as well as an escape from many forms of stress and trauma.[1] The New York Times termed it a reaction to hustle culture and the advent of personal branding.

Okay I kind of like at least half of those ‘cores’.

Not only but also:

The movement gained further traction in many online spheres and on social media due to the mass quarantining in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2]  [3] Accordingly, it has been described by The Guardian as a “visual and lifestyle movement designed to fetishize the wholesome purity of the outdoors.”[2] It emphasizes simplicity and the soft peacefulness of the pastoral life as an escape from the dangers of the modern world.[4]

That’s me and popular culture waving farewell. I am now well behind the curve.

Though one thing caught my eye, in the extended definition of cottagecore… “traditional skills and crafts such as foraging, baking and pottery,”are mentioned.

Foraging they say. Useful if the creature could be persuaded to do some of that.

Ahead of his time… August 15, 2020

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TonyWilson that is. Reading this piece in the Guardian about his early 2000s online music venture, music33 where MP3s would be sold on the internet, it’s difficult not to concur with a quote at the end of the piece that notes:

Yet his pioneering role in the digital music adventure deserves recognition. For Allison, the spirit of music33 lives on in Bandcamp, not iTunes. “Because they’ve worked out a way for artists to keep their work and still turn a profit. Such business thinking didn’t exist at the time. Wilson was way ahead but there was no structure for his ideas. He was like Nostradamus.”

One does not have to buy into his often robust myth-making (on his own part) to feel that this was one time he was well ahead of the curve. Unfortunately, despite the logo (design by Peter Saville – natch!) and some money, the tech wasn’t quite up there with the ambition. The description of what was on offer is both charming and indicative of why it didn’t actually work.

Arriving in summer 2000, music33 developed a barmy way of protecting clients’ tracks. Songs purchased came in a PDF; users tapped in a password to play the music. “I’m still trying to understand it even now,” Clarke chuckles. Pre-broadband dial-up internet was so slow that “you’d plug in a modem to download one track, which could take 15 minutes,” says Clarke. Music33 featured a little robot avatar named Howie, who explained how to use the site. Wilson’s plan to get Keith Allen to do its voice never came off.

Worse there was no means at the time of making ‘micro-payments’ of the 33 pence a track might cost, and it took ages to download a music file, and there weren’t great MP3 players and on it went.

But the fact it was tried at all is fascinating (and of course it wasn’t the only one) and hardly surprising Apple with vast resources and know-how swept in on both the supply side and the player side relatively shortly afterwards.

But the point about music being payable to musicians is particularly well made. And a thought, on Wilson’s wiki page, this project wasn’t mentioned prior to the Guardian article. I have the vaguest of memories of it myself.

This Weekend I’ll Mostly Be Listening to… CAN August 15, 2020

Posted by irishelectionliterature in This Weekend I'll Mostly Be Listening to....
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Formed in Cologne in 1968, CAN were a German Rock band, their influences were everything from Jazz, Rock and Funk. Their recording output between 1968 and 1979 was considered incredibly influential. Their live performances featured a lot of improvisation, so often live versions of their songs were rarely the same.

Signs of Hope – A continuing series August 14, 2020

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Uncategorized.
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Gewerkschaftler suggested this recently:

I suggest this blog should have a regular (weekly) slot where people can post happenings at the personal or political level that gives them hope that we’re perhaps not going to hell in a handbasket as quickly as we thought. Or as the phlegmatic Germans put it “hope dies last”.

Any contributions this week?

Returning to economic normality… in…er…2022 August 14, 2020

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What a telling statement from John FitzGerald in the IT recently.

It is when the economy returns to more normal behaviour, hopefully by 2022, and households begin to spend their savings, that the economy will experience a delayed stimulus and the Government will see a delayed temporary revenue boost.

I think that’s realistic, but two years of this limbo-like situation? Again, it would be no harm for someone in government to be saying it like it is.

Just one other thought, as noted by Pangurbán, FitzGerald isn’t wrong in arguing that ‘expanding the cycle-to-work scheme to cover bikes costing €1,250’ is a bit of an absurdity. I had a bicycle stolen last year and found the sums being thrown around re a new one on the current standard a little absurd, potentially adding on entirely unnecessary €100’s to the price. As he says, you can get a good bicycle for city travel for a fraction of that cost. €600 or thereabouts is entirely feasible. And I think he’s right about another aspect, the money saved there would be much better spent on establishing ‘bike parks at commuter stations’.

That new dispensation in the North…. August 14, 2020

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Have to agree with Newton Emerson for once, where in a recent column he notes that:

It is fitting that the North-South Ministerial Council reconvened in Dublin Castle last Friday for its first full meeting since November 2016.

Of all the institutions of the Belfast Agreement, the council most closely reflects John Hume’s vision. Stormont is the least relevant in this respect, despite its prominence in how the peace process is judged.

As Emerson notes, following the failure of reform in Northern Ireland internally, and responsibility which Emerson correctly ascribes ‘overwhelmingly’ to unionism, Hume sought not a local settlement but one which encompassed the whole island. Hence the Council of Ireland in 1973 and later the AIA and so on. Interestingly Emerson argues that of the three strands of the GFA/BA – the Executive/Assembly, the NSMC and the British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference, the latter was meant to ‘fade away’ with Stormont acquiring more power and the NSMC also expanding its remit from the original six areas of cooperation. That said in the years since the GFA/BA was implemented (more rather than in full) little growth has been seen on the NSMC front.

And I cannot fault Emerson when he writes:

The danger of Stormont for nationalists is that it becomes the natural focus of all Northern Ireland politics, to the extent of creating an internal settlement.

If a fraction of the care put into maintaining devolution was shown to the North-South Ministerial Council, it still has the potential John Hume imagined.

It’s hardly a stretch to see a situation develop in the next ten years or so where that focus remains in NI and the NSMC has little particular life. Particularly given the aversion FF has to such matters. Yet the GFA/BA explicitly is about building on the NSMC.

BTW the EU has gone AWOL in Emerson’s analysis completely. Ah well.

There’s another point riffing on Emerson’s article that is perhaps pertinent. His point that the British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference would fade away is perhaps worth reflecting on. Assume that at some point an agreed Ireland springs into being. How would that work and what if elements of political unionism were participating in that as part of an Irish government – say propping up one of the larger parties?

And speaking of the BIIC, check out the pattern of meetings.

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