Friday, July 06, 2018

Pot Pourri

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B077WCH2PQ Pot Pourri, a collection of short stories. Free from Amazon for five days. Free to borrow from the library any day. #potpourri

For the benefit of everyone I haven't told already, the title is to annoy the DUP who always shout "No Pot Pourri" at their rallies. 


Amazon Author Page

Thursday, July 05, 2018

https://worthingflash.blogspot.com is now live

https://worthingflash.blogspot.com/2018/07/modern-times.html Can you do better? Of course you can. Then post your flash fiction to worthingflash@gmail.com and the best will appear on the blog. Flash fiction welcome from pupils, teachers, pensioners and anyone else for that matter. I won't reject your work if you are not from Worthing because that would be ridiculous. Writers of the World unite.


A story about modern times

Tuesday, July 03, 2018

The website that asked too many questions

I teach a course for people who are older than I am (66+) on IT safety so I thought a website called http://www.learnmyway.com with a free course on staying safe online might be useful. Trying the site out, however, I found it did the very thing I warn my students about. It asked for information including name, address and email address These are quite unnecessary for websites offering a free service. I strongly advise students against giving any such information unless they want to have their email inbox flooded with advertising rubbish.

Many a time people have fallen for pubs and hotels which demand email addresses for internet access. Once they have done that they bombard the hapless victim with special offers and rubbish. These days the emails have a tiny tiny "unsubscribe" at the bottom which most of my students simply cannot see.



Amazon Author Page

Thursday, June 07, 2018

Resources on the TES website

You can access all my resources from this page.

https://www.tes.com/member/helpline2

I have uploaded 24 resources.
They have been viewed over 16,847 times and downloaded over 8,395 times.


Here is an example:

https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/mirror-of-eternity-worksheets-6295946


Thursday, May 24, 2018

alt right "white Zionists"?

According to Nada Elia, writing for Middle Eastern Eye,

"Richard Spencer, the de facto leader of the “alt-right” white supremacist movement in the US, lucidly articulated that argument when he answered a reporter on Israel’s Channel 2, who asked him about the chants of “blood and soil” which his followers were declaiming at the Charlottesville rally in Virginia earlier this month."

"Spencer explained that, logically, Zionists should “respect” his views: “... an Israeli citizen, someone who understands your identity, who has a sense of nationhood and peoplehood, and the history and experience of the Jewish people, you should respect someone like me, who has analogous feelings about whites. You could say that I am a white Zionist – in the sense that I care about my people, I want us to have a secure homeland for us and ourselves. Just like you want a secure homeland in Israel"."
The full article is here 

The alt-right, it need hardly be added, are no friends of the Jewish people. The BBC witch-hunt against Ken Livingstone glosses over stories like these but they ought to be a matter of concern.

Saturday, May 12, 2018

#Worthingflash


#Worthingflash

A feast of flash fiction and short stories from writers in Worthing.

Wednesday 4th July 2018

5.30 pm to 7.00 pm

The New Park Community and Arts Association
New Park Road
Chichester
PO19 7XY


Derek McMillan

Julian M Miles

Caroline Osella

Admission £1 from


Friday, May 04, 2018

500 percent increase in number of Labour Councillors

The results for Worthing are very good news for Labour.


There were only 13 seats in contention which means that 38.46 percent of the seats available went to Labour.

























Monday, April 30, 2018

Jeremy Corbyn on Amber Rudd

There has been disquiet that Amber Rudd is merely a scapegoat for Theresa May's policies. May wanted to outdo the racism of UKIP and her hostile environment was part and parcel of that policy.

Jeremy Corbyn tweeted today. I think you will agree:

Today I've been meeting people from the Windrush generation. They’ve made an incredible contribution to this country.

With @AmberRuddHR's departure, @Theresa_May has lost her human shield.

The Prime Minister should end the “hostile environment” she created. 
 
 

Monday, April 23, 2018

Charles to head Commonwealth

The accession of Charles Windsor to the leadership of the Commonwealth has been portrayed (at least by the more toady sections of the press) as a great victory for monarchism. Nothing could be further from the truth. The choice of Charles Windsor  as a new figurehead underscores the irrelevance of the Commonwealth.

The Australian Government for example couldn't care less whether Mickey Mouse or Goofy became head of the Commonwealth. Australia is now officially a South East Asian nation. In the terms which count to Australian big business - i.e. dollars - trade with South East Asia is seen as more important than clinging to the remnants of Empire.

Charles makes George III look like a model of sanity. According to legend, George made a tree on his estate prime minister. Charles regularly talks to his plants. If you find he tries to replace May with a hawthorn don't say I didn't warn you.

To underline how in touch he is with the modern world,  Charles told Anita Sethi that she didn't look as if she were from Manchester. This was laughed off in The Sun as "like father like son", another blunder in the mould of the loveable Prince Philip.

Anita Sethi did not find it amusing and regarded it as evidence that Charles had no business leading the commonwealth. In the Guardian article entitled "Dear Prince Charles, do you think my brown skin makes me unBritish?" she said "Most of all, I feel angry that there could be such casual ignorance in the corridors of power, an ignorance that also permeates society – not least because some British people of colour invited here have been threatened with deportation. They don’t look like they are from here, according to some."

It is way past time to sweep away these royal parasites.





Friday, April 20, 2018

Cuts in Worthing

In WORTHING, your council will have £83 less to spend on your household by 2020 than they had in 2010. 

Under the Tories some of the most deprived areas in the country are hit the hardest, while Tory councils are given a better deal. 

On average, Tory councils will have £128 less to spend per household, while Labour councils are hit four times harder – losing £524.

Monday, April 16, 2018

Wolf in Sheep's Clothing

I see from the Worthing Herald that Christopher James has been allowed to stand as a Conservative candidate after a good five years with the obnoxious racists of UKIP. Is this a change of heart or a sober assessment of the chances of UKIP gaining or losing seats on the council? Doesn't the Tory Party have some kind of de-nazification process for former UKIPpers and if not why not?

Is there a principled difference between the Tories and UKIP?


UKIP started out as a protest against the EU but with the infiltration of the National Front a number of racist, misogynist and homophobic policies which are irrelevant to the EU came to the fore. Voters in Durrington should be aware of precisely what they are voting for. Is it a wolf in sheep's clothing?




AI blues

If people are seriously concerned about the impact of AI, they could do worse than remember the ideas of the  scientist and writer, Isaac Asimov, who formulated the three laws of robotics. The first of these was, "a robot may not harm a human being or by inaction allow one to come to harm.' 

This is a far cry from the aims of the military planners but it brings a human perspective to the problem. We could do with one.

Thursday, April 05, 2018

Gatwick Detainees

The address of Gatwick Detainees Welfare Group is 
The Orchard, 
1-2 Gleneagles Court, 
Brighton Road, 
Crawley,
 RH10 6AD



It is easiest to donate online https://www.cafonline.org/charityprofile/gdwg

Wednesday, April 04, 2018

Art exhibition at Cockatoo Island

Cockatoo Island in Sydney Harbour was the venue for an art exhibition which appropriately challenged the prevailing orthodoxy of the Turnbull Government. Turnbull has sought to gain votes by running a hate campaign against asylum seekers and promoting a nationalist "Australia First" policy.

The exhibition was dominated by an exhibit by Ai Weiwei which was made with rubber from a factory in China which produces boats used by refugees. It is entitled "Law of the Journey" and reflects the conditions under which many refugees have risked their lives on the sea.



Another exhibit was a replica of the Hiroshima bomb which was an accompaniment to an animated display by Yukinori Yanagi which centres on an eyeball in which are reflected the atomic tests, many of which were carried out in the Pacific.





Cockatoo Island itself has a grim past. On it you can still see the barracks in which convicts lived in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions. You can also see the scarcely better accommodation of the soldiers who were guarding them and the luxury accommodation provided for the privileged officers. All of these were built with convict labour i.e. slave labour.
One artwork which interested me depicted one of those unfortunate convicts.


Is there any principled difference between the Tories who sentenced them to transportation for life 150 years ago and their heirs who say of asylum seekers who died in the Mediterranean "they made their own choice"?

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Marine Le Pen offended at being called a Nazi?

Marine Le Pen wants it both ways. Last year she was denying any French involvement in the holocaust and this year she objects to being called a Nazi. It is no more a slur to call Le Pen a Nazi than it is to call Turnbull a Liberal.


A year ago, The Irish Times said the following:

Ms Le Pen cast doubt on French responsibility in the deportation of Jews during the Second World War, undermining years of her own efforts to dissociate the extreme right-wing Front National (FN) from second World War revisionism.

I don’t think that France is responsible for the Vél d’Hiv,” Ms Le Pen, who is tied for first place in polls with the centrist Emmanuel Macron, said on April 9th.



Some 13,000 Jewish men, women and children were rounded up by French police on July 16th, 1942, and taken to the Vélodrome d’Hiver cycling race track, for deportation to Nazi death camps.





The media and Labour leaders

When Harold Wilson was Labour leader the gutter press purported to believe that he was a dangerous radical and probably a Russian spy. They had no evidence for either assertion but that scarcely slowed them down.

Even the inoffensive Miliband was labelled “Red Ed” by the Sun. I think most Socialists considered that if that was what they thought of as “a red”, heaven help them if they ever come across a real Marxist.

This infamous tradition has been continued with Jeremy Corbyn being accused of being everything from a Trot to a Stalinist with a ludicrous accusation of anti-semitism resulting for his principled support for the Palestinian cause.

To watch the TV or read the papers you would imagine that there was no problem of racism in the Tory Party, UKIP or the DUP. Again the facts don’t impinge.

The latest piece of nonsense is the slandering of the left Labour group Momentum by Sajid Javid who referred to them as ‘neo-fascists’.Did he have any evidence for this? None was presented. He proved it by asserting it.

Do the Daily Mail really genuinely believe this to be true? Surely if they did they would follow their traditional attitude towards fascism and support Momentum. That would be a sight to see. “Hurrah for Momentum – the heirs of Oswald Mosley”.

I think voters might conclude that a Labour Party which does not earn the hatred of the gutter press is probably doing something wrong. The consistently ludicrous nature of the claims, the fact that the TV and the press produce nothing which could be called evidence, means that this hate campaign is doomed to failure.


Socialists fight for the many, not the few. The millionaire press will never support that objective.




Sunday, March 04, 2018

The Armed Man


The Sandgate Singers’ performance of ‘The Armed Man’ in Arundel Cathedral on 3rd March was a dramatic event to witness. The audience reacted to the opening in which the black-clad choir were marching on the spot for all the world like a tide of death. This was in tune with the opening theme, “The armed man must be feared.”


The work, by Karl Jenkins, is described as “a mass for peace” and it includes the traditional elements of the Kyrie, Sanctus, Agnus Dei and Benedictus. These are interspersed with movements which convey the futility and horror of war. Even the Sanctus, which praises the “Lord God of Hosts” has a distinctly martial air.


I think no less a place than a cathedral can do justice to this powerful work. It is unfortunate that one of the most distinctive pieces of the work – the Muslim call to prayer – was excluded by the powers that be. The words of the call to prayer, “God is great, prayer is better than sleep.” are not out of place in a Cathedral and now would be a good time to remind people that Muslims worship the same God.


The event was in aid of the “Love your hospital” charity. A pity a fraction of the billions squandered on war can’t be used for a better purpose. Carl Jenkins drew attention to the human cost of war and the voices of the choir became positively demonic in the sixth movement “Charge!” 


It was an evening the audience will not forget.



Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Far right threat

The i newspaper today says the police have warned that the far right threat is growing.


Anyone who has chatted with a member of the Metropolitan police can confirm there is definitely a lot of far-right extremism around!

I had the experience of drinking in a pub frequented by officers and most of my school pupils would have found the racism embarrassingly childish. 





Wednesday, January 31, 2018

David Walliams

David Walliams, the ‘know nothing’ host of the Presidents Club event for three years, has had his books pulled from shelves in bookshops. It is a bit surprising that The Pavilion Theatre thinks it appropriate to have a performance of his work on stage in April. Hasn’t news of this major scandal reached Worthing?




Saturday, November 11, 2017

Capitalism means war


A work of art represents the thousands who died while the generals treated them as "cannon fodder". The generals got medals and hypocritically commemorate the "glorious dead."

Those who survived the Great War, greeted the 11th of November as the end of the slaughter and the beginning of peace. They would have been mystified to see generals and royals using it as an opportunity to celebrate war almost a hundred years later.
Since the end of the Second World War, there has not been a single day of peace. In my lifetime there has been one imperial war of conquest after another.
The red poppy is an ambiguous symbol. On the one hand it represents remembering those who fell in war and the money is used to support those soldiers who suffered as a result of war. On the other hand it is used by generals and the royal family to glorify war. If anyone dares to criticise this disgusting militarism they are immediately accused of disrespecting the fallen and being too mean to help the military victims of warfare. This has been characterised as "Poppy Fascism".
Socialist internationalism is the only basis on which militarism can be opposed. The people of Iraq, Syria or Afghanistan are some of the poorest people in the world. What with the ruthless bombing campaigns of American Imperialism and the disgusting brutality of the Taliban and ISIL their sufferings have been made worse.

Ironically the Kurds who routed ISIL have been the victims of a vicious campaign waged by the Iraqi regime.

War is not "insanity". To the arms merchants, to the royals and generals, to the politicians it makes perfect sense. For the working class it is indistinguishable from psychosis. 

Derek McMillan

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Review of Gunpowder

The Gunpowder trilogy on the BBC has drawn criticism for the violence and cruelty which it portrays. This is understandable. However, the tortures shown in such shocking detail were historically accurate. So was execution by hanging, drawing and quartering.

Any depiction of royalty which gives a romantic fairy-tale view of the splendour of the court and ignores the methods by which the autocratic rule was maintained is frankly dishonest.

The second episode in which Catesby (played by Kit Harrington) witnesses the burning of two "heretics" (actually Jews) in Spain is a fair indication that the methods of autocracy did not vary much between the regimes in Britain and Spain.

The persecution of Catholics in this country was clearly depicted as a means by which the aristocracy, and in particular Lord Robert Cecil (played by Mark Gatiss),  enriched themselves. Religion was used as a means of social control and as a pretext for torture and murder.

The interchange between  Fr Henry Garnet (played by Peter Mullan) and Cecil in the final episode is particularly telling. Cecil accused Fr Garnet of causing the gunpowder plot. Although he is not named by any conspirator and is depicted as opposing the plot, his preaching was enough to hang him. He responds by drawing attention to Cecil's role in causing the troubles. You cannot expect that people who are so persecuted will not respond in kind.

Anne Vaux (Liv Tyler) plays a strong female character in a period when patriarchy kept women firmly "in their place". I wouldn't dream of giving the plot away (no pun intended) but for most of those involved it was unlikely to end well.

Although gruesome, this is a very good series and well worth watching.



Friday, October 20, 2017

50 word story

At the border of Myanmar the police asked if I was a Muslim or a Bhuddist. Thinking fast, I claimed that I was an atheist. The police were having none of it. Pointing a gun at me the policeman said, "So are you a Muslim atheist or a Buddist atheist?"
--

Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Bosses' Law

The two most significant movements in my lifetime were in fact illegal. The fight against the Poll Tax was illegal but it defeated the Poll Tax and brought down the hated Margaret Thatcher.
The massive illegal strike wave when a Conservative government imprisoned five dockers in 1972 ended in a humiliating defeat for the Conservatives.
Unite the union is not advocating murder or arson (whatever the Daily Mail may pretend!). However, unjust laws have to be opposed.

Moggy

I don't have a vote in the Tory leadership election but I think Jacob Rees-Mogg is the nineteenth century's answer to Momentum and he can put those working classes in their place. Also "Moggy Moggy Moggy Out Out Out" has a certain resonance to it.


Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Practice

Our practice nurse told me they used to practise taking blood samples from each other during training. How widespread is this? Do cops practise beating each other up? Do lawyers practise lying to other trainee lawyers? As for OFSTED bullies, let's not go there. 

Thursday, September 07, 2017

Unskilled

MPs define "unskilled" as anyone earning less than £30,000. MPs earn a lot more than £30,000 and the job requires no specific skills whatsoever.


There is however, a "magic money tree" for MPs salaries and perks. Who can forget Adolf Duncan Smith and his £39 breakfast at our expense? The Mirror calculated that

"Iain Duncan Smith's breakfast cost 557 times the amount to be spent on kids' morning meals."


The crackdown on "unskilled" migrants is racism pure and simple. The BBC has been quick to find businesses which oppose the government's plans. That is not the same as saying that it is immoral and disgraceful.

Yet again Teresa May has taken the opportunity of a demonstration by nurses against low pay to show her contempt. Apparently nurses are to be dismissed as "this, that and the other." I can think of a few things nurses might say about May!

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Derek-McMillan/e/B009FUXHWY/

 

 

 

 

Thursday, August 17, 2017

Steve Bannon

According to the BBC,  Steve Bannon has distanced himself from White Nationalist "clowns". Bannon however is regarded as a far-right influence in the Trump administration. Far from providing firm leadership, Trump has in fact faced one way, then another and then back to the start on Nazis.

His photograph with a portrait of Hitler has not helped.

There is a growing consensus in the Republican Party that Trump is out of control and something of a loose cannon. By distancing himself from White Nationalists, Bannon is distancing himself from Trump's statement. The administration is falling apart.


https://www.amazon.co.uk/Derek-McMillan/e/B009FUXHWY/

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Top of the Lake

I just caught up with "Top of the Lake". It is hard to believe men have such dreadful attitudes to women. Having said which I would lay a bet that every piece of misogyny is a quote from somebody! The teenagers sitting around with their laptops and rating prostitutes seem a caricature but if it does anything to make people look at their own attitudes and behaviour it is no bad thing.

The title is clever, a girl of "Asian appearance" is called "China Girl" in a depersonalised way and the poster for the series uses "China Girl" to refer to the fragility of the detective, Robin Griffin played by Elizabeth Moss.



https://www.amazon.co.uk/Derek-McMillan/e/B009FUXHWY/

 

 

 

 

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Trotsky and Blair

In the Moscow trials, the Stalinists accused Trotsky of being a fascist and working for the Nazis. The trials included evidence that Trotskyists had met at a hotel which had been demolished years before. The fundamental premise was invalidated when Stalin changed his policy and went into alliance with Hitler.

The latest accusation, attempting to link Trotsky, 77 years after his death, to the mass murdering war criminal Tony Blair is just as disgraceful.

Say what you like about Trotsky, he wasn't a lickspittle of American Imperialism.




Friday, August 11, 2017

Trump

Donald Trump is not always sure which country he is bombing. He famously confused Iraq with Syria. South Korea should be nervous about his threats to North Korea. 

Monday, July 31, 2017

Dollfuss

I was a little surprised to see Dollfuss lauded in the pages of Magnificat. He was a dictator who killed his enemies. I don't know if he forgave them afterwards. 

His rivalry with Hitler was in the nature of a turf war between gangsters and not a matter of principle. This is how Bertold Brecht portrayed it in his play "The Resisible Rise of Arturo Ui."



Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Things can only get better

I understand that the writer wrote jokes for Tony Blair. I do hope he didn't write that one about weapons of mass destruction. It didn't go well.

Labour activists will recognise many of the situations in this book and I certainly enjoyed reading it. It would be possible to take exception to the tone of this book if it were not delivered with such a self-deprecatory air. It is written from the point of view of a Labour Party activist and it shows empathy. I cannot think of another book of which one could say that. For non-Labour readers, I have no idea what they will make of this book but they will certainly find it interesting and amusing. 



Wednesday, July 05, 2017

Sean O'Grady on Broken

After the Chichester Festival event yesterday, we came home to enjoy the final episode of "Broken". It was a first class piece of work and only someone given to petty carping could possibly find fault with it.

I turned to the "i" newspaper this morning to find that Sean O'Grady apparently hadn't liked it and smugly dismissed it as "ridiculous".

The breathtaking scene in which the gambling machines were smashed by the people who had most to lose was lost on O'Grady. So was the exceptional sermon on casting the money-changers out of the temple. O'Grady is the former economics editor of the Independent and clearly the anger against the casino society expressed by Father Michael (Sean Bean) went right over his head.

I take issue with O'Grady's arrogant dismissal of "Broken". I would submit that Jesus could have been tried for criminal damage for casting the money-changers out of the temple. He did get in quite a lot of trouble with the authorities as it was!
As for the ending which O'Grady called "ridiculous", I thought that it showed the people Father Michael had tried (and sometimes failed) to help queueing up to give him a bit of support when he needed it.

Friday, June 09, 2017

Thursday, June 08, 2017

Chichester Festival 4th July

#Worthingflash

A feast of flash fiction and short stories from writers in Worthing.

4th July

5.30 pm to 7.00 pm

The New Park Community and Arts Association
New Park Road
Chichester
PO19 7XY


Derek McMillan

Patricia Feinberg Stoner

Rosemary Noble

Admission £1 from



Wednesday, June 07, 2017

Beccy Cooper on Education



The NUT does not support a political party so I remind you that other parties are available!

Saturday, June 03, 2017

Question Time Special

I thought the most telling point in the Question Time special was made by a member of the audience, "Why is everyone here so keen on killing millions of people?" Jeremy Corbyn is pilloried by the right-wing press but I would prefer a PM who would think before pressing the button.

May wouldn't think twice. BoJo wouldn't think once!


On the cap on social care costs, May preferred to keep it vague and make jokes about a "magic money tree." There is one of course, it is used for MP's expenses.

There is a cash tree you see!


And again she repeated the downright lie "we are spending more on education" when per pupil they are not spending more on education and that is why cuts are inevitable if this shower are re-elected.


It was good of May to stand in for Rudd but is she as good as the original?