Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts

Monday, July 27, 2009


INTERNATIONAL LABOUR-SCOTLAND:
HELP SAVE DIAGEO JOBS:
Molly had no idea that at least part of her favourite industry, the booze industry, was so cartellized- as the list of the following brands for Diageo makes plain. Ah, the sadness, and even sadder that the company is thinking of terminating the jobs of so many who have done so much to bring pleasure to the masses across the world. Here from the international union, the IUF, is an appeal for solidarity against these cuts.

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Unite Fights Back as Drinks Giant Diageo Celebrates Good Times by Axing 900 Jobs in Scotland:
IUF UK affiliate Unite is campaigning in response to the announced destruction of 900 jobs across Scotland by transnational drinks company Diageo. Diageo, whose spirits, beer and wine brands include Smirnoff, Johnnie Walker, Captain Morgan, Baileys, J&B, José Cuervo, Tanqueray, Guinness, Crown Royal, Beaulieu Vineyard and Sterling Vineyards wines, and Bushmills Irish whiskey, is hugely profitable, with rising sales and margins by all its leading brands. Total profits for 2008 were over 3.6 billion USD, the company spent nearly 1.5 billion buying back its own shares and the CEO pocketed over USD 8.2 million in pay.
To squeeze yet more money for shareholders and top executives, the company has announced the elimination of 900 jobs through closure, outsourcing and redundancy at the John Walker packaging plant in Kilmarnock, Port Dundas distillery in Glasgow and three other sites.
Few if any other jobs are on offer in the communities targeted by Diageo for closure and redundancy.
Unite is vigorously fighting back, with marches, rallies and pressure on politicians.
To support their struggle visit the Unite campaign site for the latest campaign news and click here to send a message to Diageo CEO Paul Walsh through labourstart's support page.
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THE LETTER:
Please go to the Labour Start link above to send the following letter to Diageo management.
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Dear Paul Walsh
We are deeply concerned to learn of the major job losses you have recently announced as a result of the proposed closures of both Kilmarnock packaging plant and the Port Dundas distillery and cooperage, together with rest of the package of redundancies and outsourcing on other sites at Shieldhall, Hurlford and Elgin. With profits in excess of £2bn last year, there can be no justification for these measures which will decimate the affected communities in Scotland and by so doing, will cause irreparable damage to the reputation of the Johnny Walker brand. We therefore urge you to reconsider your proposals and to work closely with the trade unions to agree an alternative business plan that will guarantee a sustainable future for all.

Friday, January 25, 2008

HOLIDAYS:
HAPPY ROBBIE BURNS DAY:



Aye me wee laddies an' lassies, taday be the grate an' glorious feast o' the birthin' o' Rabbie Burrrrns, national poet o' swait Scotland. Robbie Burns (January 25, 1759 - July 21, 1796) has become something of a cult figure, both in Scotland itself and in the worldwide Scottish diaspora. Born the eldest of the 7 children of William Burness and Agnes Broun two miles south of Ayr in Alloway, South Ayrshire, Scotland he lived in the house that his father had built until he was seven years old. At that time his father sold the house and became a tenant farmer at the Mount Oliphant farm southeast of Alloway. Here Robbie Burns grew up in poverty and hard work. He rfeceived very little official schooling. He was taught by his father, a self-educated man, and one John Murdoch, an iterant teacher of the district. Through his young adulthood he worked as a farm labourer and as a flax dresser, all the while carrying on quite a number of love affairs that made him rather unpopular amongst the strict religious parishoners of the locality. He fathered his first illegitimate child in 1785 and had several others, most illegitimate and legitimate.




Burns began his literary career in April, 1786 when, at the suggestion of his brother he published the volume 'Poems: Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect' . His success was immediate, and he became well known across Scotland. At one of the many literary gatherings to which he was invited he impressed the then 16 year old Walter Scott as having eyes that he had never again seen in any other man. Burns carryed on with his womanizing while in Edinburgh where he fathered another illegitimate child, Robert Burns Clow, with Jenny Clow in 1788. While in Ediburgh he met James Johnson, a music engraver and seller, and between them they began the 'Scots Musical Museum' to which he contributed (either writing or gathering) about a third of the 600 songs in the collection. Many of Burns' efforts were of songs such as 'Auld Lang Syne' . he contributed over 100 songs to 'The Meolodies of Scotland', was a major contributer to 'A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs for the Voice' . Burns would usually compose the tune for the songs before he finished the words. One of his most amusing efforts is the 'Merry Muses of Caledonia' , a collection of bawdy traditional folk songs. He often used the tunes of older songs for his own song poems. Auld Lang Syne, for instance, is set to the tune of 'Can Ye Labour Lea' .




Burns wrote extensively in standard English (the language of his political tracts), the Scots dialect and in Scots Gaelic. He focused on many themes including republicanism, radicalism, Scottish patriotism, anti-clericalism, issues of class oppression, gender roles, poverty, sex, partying and many aspects of Scottish culture. Burns' works greatly influenced many subsequent socialist and radical writers such as Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Steinbeck. Over at Le Revue Gauche megablogger Eugene Plawiuk has faithfully commemorated Robbie Burns day each year since 2005, and much information on Burns' radical views can be found there. This year is no exception, and references to his blogs on RB Day in previous years can be found there. The flavour of Burns' anti-clerical sentiments may be guaged from the following extract from 'No Churchman Am I', a song he published in 1782:



" No churchman am I, for to rail and to write,
No statesman nor soldier to plot or to fight,
No sly man of business contriving a snare,
For a big-belly'd bottle's the whole of my care.




The peer I don't envy, I give him his bow;
I scorn not the peasant, though ever so low;
But a club of good fellows, like those that are here,
And a bottle like this, are my glory and care.




Here passes the squire on his brother-his horse;
There centum per centum, the cit with his purse;
But see you the Crown, how it waves in the air ?
There a big-belly'd bottle still eases my care.




The wife of my bosum, alas! she did die;
for sweet consolation to church I did fly;
I found that old Solomon proved it fair,
That a big belly'd bottle's a cure for all care."



Robbie Burns' Day is traditionally celebrated by the Robbie Burns' Supper. This has become a much more popular event than the official Scottish national day, St. Andrew's Day, let alone the North American proposal of Tartan Day. It has had a format that hasn't varied since the time of the poet's death. The event begins with the host's welcoming speech and the 'Selkirk Grace'. There is then the soup course, usually something like Scotch Broth, Potatoe Soup or Cock-a-Leekie. Then comes the highlight of the evening, the "piping-in" of the haggis. if you don't know haggis then your education is incomplete. See this website for haggis recipes and other matters related to things "haggishy". be aware that the alternative recipes are arranged, "in order of increasing use of animal parts that would normally be thrown away". The ceremony continues with a recitation of Burns' 'Address To a Haggis", performed either by the host or by somebody with acting talent. It begins as follows (see the Robbie Burns' Supper website for the complete poem):
"Fair fa' your honest, sonsie face,
Great chieftan o' the puddin-race!
Aboon them a' ye tak your place,
Painch,tripe, or thairm:
Weel are ye wordy o' a grace
As lang's my arm.
The cutting open of the haggis is the highlight of the evening. After this has been done there is a toast to the pur wee haggis. See the websiote cited above for more details. If you are interested in things "Burnsian" try browsing the foillowing sites. Don't forget to visit Le Revue Gauche for comment on the politics of Burns.
*Scottish Government Site on Burns
*The Burns Federation
*National Burns Collection
*The Bard
*The Works of Robbie Burns (collected works on project Guttenberg, very good reference site)
Hey, here's a special treat. Many of Burns' works have become part of international culture, including that song that everybody tries to drunkenly sing at the stroke of midnight on New Year's Eve (Hogmanny in Scotland). Ever met anyone who knew all the words to 'Auld Lang Syne' ? probably not, and if they did once know them said memory is irretrievable at midnight Jan 1. So, here as a special public service, are the complete lyrics of Auld Land Syne. memorize them now and amaze your friends next New Years.
"For auld lang syne, my dear,
For auld lang syne,
We'll tak a cup o' kindness yet,
For auld lang syne.
Should auld acquaintance be forgot,
And never brought to mind ?
Should auld acquaintance be forgot
And auld lang syne.
And surely ye'll be your pint stowp,
And surely I'll be mine;
And we'll tak a cup o' kindness yet,
For auld lang syne.
We twa hae run about the braes,
And pou'd the gowans fine;
But we've wander'd morry a weary fit,
Sin' auld lang syne.
We twa hae paidl'd in the burn,
Frae mornin' sun till dine;
But seas between us braid hae roar'd
Sin' auld lang syne.
And ther's a hand, my trusty fiere !
And gie's a hand o' thine !
And we'll tak a right gude-willie waught,
For auld lang syne.

Thursday, September 06, 2007


BRITAIN, GLASCOW, VICTORIOUS IWW CAMPAIGN:
News of the IWW's most recent successful organizing campaign, the struggle to 'Save the Crichton Campus' in Scotland has started to appear across the internet. In this case the IWW didn't act just in a workplace but as the facilitator and initiator of a much wider community campaign that was a matter of concern for a wide spectrum of people in one area of Scotland. To quote from the article by Nick Durie, a Central Scotland Organizer in the IWW,
"The victorious campaign to save the Crichton Campus has been one of BIROC's biggest campaigns to date and easily the biggest campaign fought by the IWW Clydeside GMB and the new Glasgow University job branch, and has involved civic groups, local neighbourhood bodies, trade unions and political organizations from across Scotland....
It is, however, intended as a contribution to the debate within the IWW, and the role of the organization in the wider class struggle. i believe that this campaign shows that a small radical union can have a big catalyzing effect, and that this effect is most felt when it is used with other organizations to bring together industrial and community based organizational capacity which would otherwise have been fractured.....
The aim of this short contribution is to demonstrate that the IWW will grow at the fastest rate and have the most positive effect on the wider class struggle where it works with the mainstream trade unions, using their organizational capacity, acting as a rank and file network or base union within them and providing the kind of catalytic effects required or making the interlocutions necessary to utilize and link up with the mass organizations of our local communities and neighbourhoods to aid workplace struggles....."
To read the entire article with the complete history of the struggle go to the A-Infos article by Nick Durie.

Monday, December 11, 2006


THE DAY OF THE "11s": PART ONE:
"SOCIALIST" BOSSES ATTACK SCOTTISH WOBBLIES:
It's Dec. 11th and her Royal Pubaness, Empress Mollymew I And Only declares this the "day of the elevens". The first eleven to note are the eleven workers at the Scottish Parliament. Of these five are IWW members. These workers are employees of the now-split Scottish Socialist Party, a semi-Trot group that became the darling of the British left for actually electing members to the regional Parliament of Scotland beginning in 1999 when their ex-leader Tommy Sheridan was first elected. Sheridan was joined by Rosemary Byme and 4 other members in the recent elections in 2003. True to their Trotskyist heritage the SSP began to infight, and the result was that Sheridan and Byme split off to form their own sect called 'Solidarity'. They took two of the original 13 parliamentary support workers with them during the split, leaving the magic number "11" with the original Party. The details of the split are singularly unedifying with a veneer of Sheridan's private life coating the usual Trot hunger to find tiny details to split upon.
The SSP and Sheridan's group now haggle over the exact sum that each group will receive from the Scottish taxpayer to promote their own convoluted agendas. The result has been that the remaining 11 workers are left without enough funds to support their wages. They can only continue to be paid if they "voluntarily" switch to the Sheridan group.
Merry Christmas ! The Scottish IWW refuses to take sides in this dispute. They are demanding that all six of the MSP honour their contract with their workers until the May, 2007 elections with no pay cuts or firings.
To follow the continued soap opera of the vanguard of the workers versus the workers stay tuned to the British IWW site at http://www.iww.org.uk .
Molly