Wednesday, April 17, 2019

The Conscience of the Rich


Rich individuals and corporations have rushed to pledge hundreds of millions to rebuild Notre Dame and salve their consciences. No doubt they expect to go to Heaven.It is more likely that a camel will pass through the eye of a needle!


Under Macron one in five French families do not eat three meals a day. He is committed to restoring Notre Dame as a matter of prestige. His amour propre is worth any amount of money.

The most recent report by Secours Catholique states that "poverty is not diminishing. The number of vulnerable families with children — mainly, but not exclusively single parent families — continues to increase. The poorest amongst them, more than others, express a need to be heard: poverty is not only material and isolation is felt with increasing severity. New families who are closest to the poverty line are no longer able to make ends meet, between meagre resources and growing essential expenditure. Finally, the percentage of foreign nationals in vulnerable situations encountered by Secours Catholique in France is significantly increasing despite their overall number being stable. This confirms their increasing insecurity in our country."

In total there were around 8.8 million people living below the poverty line in France in 2017. In France this means they are living on an income of less than €1,026 a month, and many of them live on considerably less.

The rich preside over an increase in poverty and Macron, the 'president of the rich' does nothing. The face-saving pledge to rebuild Notre Dame is hypocritical in the extreme.

As Anatole France said ‘In its majestic equality, the law forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, beg in the streets and steal loaves of bread.’

That is the ‘equality’ Macron defends. 
















The Miranda Revolution 

Tuesday, April 09, 2019

Killer twists in Daisy White's "Before I Left"

This is a whodunnit and Daisy White strews a half dozen red herrings across our path before revealing the murderer. There are plenty of murders and hints at witchcraft and Satanism. The book is set in Brighton with a number of recognisable locations which make it more vivid.

Secondly, it is a thriller and there are parts of the narrative which will have the reader on the edge of the seat. There are a number of twists in the tale and surprises.

I suggest you keep the title in mind while reading the story because a great deal of the back story is revealed during the narrative.


It is set in the 1960s and there are pieces of period detail which are spot on. Homosexuality was a criminal offence at the time this story is set and the prejudice against gay men, in particular, has a role in the unfolding story.

Read this book.


 






My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Scrooge and the tax dodger


When they were young, my children's favourite Christmas TV video was "A Muppet Christmas Carol". As a teacher I could always tell whether a book report on "A Christmas Carol" was based on reading the book or watching a video because the pupil would refer to the Marley Brothers. For those who don't know, in the book there was just the one.

Michael Caine played the role of Ebenezer Scrooge. Michael Caine is one of the famous actors who were tax exiles. He was a tax exile for ten years and is "worth" an estimated £58 million.A partial list of tax exiles is available on Wikipedia. The link is here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_exile#Famous_tax_exiles

What would Scrooge have said about taxes? "Humbug" probably.

However, in the movie Scrooge also talks about his taxes going to fund the workhouses and the prisons. We no longer have workhouses (at the time of writing). Tax exiles and tax dodgers want the police to lock up criminals and the prisons to house them. They want other people to pay for the police and the prisons.

Arguments about poverty causing crime are irrelevant to them. After all, they are not poor.

And if poor people die, Scrooge had an answer to that too. "They'd better die then and decrease the surplus population." Half the Tory Party would probably agree with that sentiment, and the other half would refrain from saying it out loud.








My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Line of Duty

The TV series ‘Line of Duty’ is a work of fiction. Consequently, undercover police officers are not targeting trade unions and environmental campaigns.

Instead, they are involved in the rather more hazardous activity of infiltrating ‘OCGs’. That is one of many acronyms in the series, and stands for ‘organised crime gangs’.

The series is full of unexpected twists and turns which keep viewers on the edge of our seats. This review does not contain spoilers.

The show addresses the issue of how far an undercover officer has to act like a criminal in order to infiltrate a gang. They would be spotted and probably killed if they failed to join in with robberies. But what about killing other police officers to gain credibility?

Adrian Dunbar plays police boss Ted Hastings, and leaves the viewer wondering what is going on behind his bluff exterior. Martin Compston plays subordinate Steve Arnott, whose apparent abduction is one of many “shockers” in the series. Vicky McLure plays fellow detective Kate Fleming, whose struggle to succeed in a sexist environment is a theme of the series.

Stephen Graham plays undercover-cop-gone-native John Corbett, alongside Rochenda Sandall as crime boss Lisa McQueen. The organised criminals are portrayed as a business venture - gangster capitalism, in fact.

Interesting as the series is, it should be a matter of concern that the only unit pursuing police corruption is a fictitious one. Corrupt senior police officers routinely retire on fat pensions. People die in custody with no questions asked.

Perhaps the truest line in the series is spoken by police lawyer Gill Biggeloe (Polly Walker): “Sometimes we have a non-exclusive relationship with the truth.”

Parliament’s home affairs committee commented on the former Independent Police Complaints Commission that it was “woefully underequipped and hamstrung in achieving its original objectives. It has neither the powers nor the resources that it needs to get to the truth when the integrity of the police is in doubt.”

It’s a far cry from ‘Dixon of Dock Green’, and I hope no one is fooled into thinking the police have the issue of corruption in hand. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Instead of letting the state mark its own homework, the Socialist Party calls for democratic working-class control of police policy and staffing, and independent, trade union-led inquiries into police misconduct.

And only through workers’ struggle for socialism, where wealth and the state are controlled democratically by the working class, can we eradicate organised crime, and police repression in defence of profit.




Monday, April 08, 2019

Tax dodgers








My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Friday, April 05, 2019

Classroom Teacher Manual

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B075MN463V

Kindle version free from Amazon for four days only. Paperback free to borrow from your library every day of the week.

Answers to questions asked by teachers. Teaching is a very stressful job. I spent 16 years running a helpline for stressed teachers. Here are some of the answers I gave to their questions.

 

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Traitors

‘Traitors’ on Channel Four is a first-class post-war drama. The period detail is impeccable and the story is presented in a fine dramatic way.

At the end of the war, American Imperialism calculated that the British Empire was a spent force and the US could take on the mantle of world power. In the Middle East they pushed their project of establishing the State of Israel. The show records a story of Americans importing nylons for sale in the UK with the money  being used to buy guns for Zionist extremists in the Middle East.

CIA are equally hostile to the Labour Party as they are to the "Red Menace". They do not differentiate.

It is a work of fiction although there is a high probability that the US State Department spied on Britain in this period. CIA infiltration of trade unions, for example, is well-documented and John Pilger has investigated the spying on Australia by the CIA and its role in bringing down an elected government (Reference: https://independentaustralia.net/politics/politics-display/gough-whitlam-and-the-cias-forgotten-coup,7029

And if that was happening then, the viewer is left asking what the CIA is up to now? No good I suspect!


The role of Priscilla Garrick shows yet another facet of Keeley Hawes' ability. She plays a completely ruthless character who is prepared to have Feef Simmons killed because she suspects (correctly) that she is working for US intelligence. This is all done with a veneer of civilised behaviour which is finely balanced.

Feef is blackmailed by the CIA to continue working for them. It would be too much of a spoiler to go into more detail about how.

Another central character is Rowe (played by Michael Stuhlbarg) who is determined to persuade the American government that the CIA is playing an important role. He wants to fight Socialism by any means necessary and if that involves murder and blackmail, well it's all in a day's work.

The character Jackson Cole is played by Brandon P Bell who is the only black cast member. A war for democracy has left the position of his family back in the States no better. He himself works as a chauffeur. His story is an interesting sub-plot.

I think it is a series which leaves viewers wanting more.

Friday, March 22, 2019

Times v Ardern

David Aaronovitch in The Times has attacked the New Zealand premier Jacinda Ardern's decision not to name the Christchurch killer as ‘censorship’. Her attitude contrasts with Rupert Murdoch who loses no opportunity to attack the Muslim community verbally. On average eight negative stories about Islam appear every day in his Australian papers alone. 

As an employee of Rupert Murdoch, Aaronovitch failed to mention this.










My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Saturday, March 16, 2019

Skeptics in the Pub

If you are skeptical or perhaps just like pubs then check out Worthing Skeptics in the Pub

This is their webpage 

You can also find them on Facebook and they have no objection to Socialists or Christians putting in their two penn'orth.

If someone would like to write an introduction to skeptics in the pub I would be delighted to publish it. Still if a job's worth doing, it's worth doing it yourself!






My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Thursday, March 14, 2019

Socialist Reviews new edition

A new edition of Socialist Reviews.

The narratives of books, films and TV programmes reflect and influence the way we think about the world we live in. They may be dismissed as "irrelevant works of fiction" but that would be a mistake.

Capitalist ideology pervades the media so to study the ideology, studying the media is key. This book contains new reviews from a Socialist perspective. I have reviewed both media which reflect the prevailing ideology and those which challenge it.

You can see Socialist Reviews here

 

 







My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Saturday, March 09, 2019

My Life

This is unfinished and so is my life :)

Notes towards an Autobiography




Introduction



An autobiography is a view from the inside. In that respect it is like G. Gordon Liddy's story of the Watergate break-in. It does not tell the whole truth but it tells you how it looked to him. If you want to know the truth about me, ask my friends, or better still my enemies.
This, then, is how it all seemed to me.

The Remington



At the age of ten I got a second-hand Remington typewriter. It was given to me by my sister Janice. She went on to be the poet, short story and crime writer, Janice Robinson. I went on to write short stories, Sci Fi and crime stories. My poetry never went beyond limericks.
There was a young lady from Worthing
Whose manner was somewhat unnerving
She'd grab at your throat,
And feed you to her goat,
Regardless of your deserving.
You see what I mean.
There is a special corner of Hell for those who deride bad poetry. Devils with whips of fire make them put their deepest emotions into words and then they mock and they laugh. They torment their hearts with knives of stone.
Although my father wrote poetry, my love of poetry actually comes from my mother. It seems her education consisted of memorising poems, at least that was the bit she remembered. I was in the very fortunate position of having a mother who could recite poetry at the drop of a hat. In fact the hat wasn't necessary.
The typewriter was fascinating in itself. Remington made some of the first typewriters and this was a quite ancient model. To stop the “typebars” from getting stuck together the QWERTY keyboard was invented. It separates frequently used letters. This keyboard is so familiar that it has carried on being used long since that purpose has vanished. This is despite the fact that practically any arrangement of letters would be more practical.
The great advantage of the typewriter was that people could read my stories without having to struggle with my handwriting. Throughout my school days my teachers encouraged my story-writing and tried to improve my handwriting. They succeeded in one but the other turned out to be intractable.

Our house



We lived in Thornton Heath. To get a flavour of the place, please remember that it was normally pronounced Forntoneaf. We lived in a council house when such things existed. We were very lucky to live on the corner of our street because we had a large front garden as a result. When it came to mowing the lawn, we didn't feel lucky but we were.
There were seven children. I know that sounds a lot but it did encourage all of us to leave home so it served a purpose. I was the youngest and a lot of the child-care responsibilities were taken on by my older sisters. I loved them and they got on my wick in roughly equal proportions.
We were at the top of the road and we were to find out that there was once a drainage ditch which ran down it roughly where our house stood. We found this out on one particularly rainy night when the water started flowing in through the front door and made its way to the back door. The council eventually got around to putting in a storm drain but the council in Croydon took their time because they were not fond of spending money on council tenants. They were Tories and we doggedly refused to vote for them.
Our road was red when elections came around, red with Labour posters not the blood of Tory canvassers. There was one neighbour who didn't vote Labour, Queenie Knight, the Communist candidate.
The other side of Green Lane might as well have been in another world. My mother recalled that the parents of children on the north side of the road would not have their babies weighed in the same scales as the council estate babies.
I was foolish enough to try to join the cubs which met at St Oswald's Church on the north side. In those days the Church of England was the “Tory Party at prayer” and they were not happy about some snotty-nosed council-estate oik trying to join them. They very politely told my parents that they thought I wouldn't be comfortable joining their troop. There was another one about a mile down the road and they were not so fastidious.
Naturally we couldn't attend St Oswald's Church either. We wouldn't have been comfortable and they would probably have disinfected the pews when we left.
I attended Downsview Methodist Church instead. It was a deliberately austere building and devoid of decoration. When I first saw the beauty of a Catholic Church it came as a bit of a surprise.
My father, Roland McMillan, was an atheist but he always thought we should hear both sides of the argument and make up our own minds. None of us was baptised as infants, we had to make up our own minds about that too. He little realised it would take me sixty years to come to a decision on that one.
I believed in God. In fact I was such a devout Methodist that my mother never tired of the story of me coming home from church and trying to pour a bottle of gin down the sink. I am glad I failed because although my father never hit me, my mother believed in the laying on of hands.
Although my mother was an atheist, she also believed that “the best book to read is the Bible.” All atheists should study the Bible because otherwise they are prone to the most crass solecisms.
My father believed in dialogue. One story from before my birth was an occasion when the police came to our house to break up a communist cell they had heard about. It was in fact a discussion group and my father had invited the new vicar to come along. So the result was that the vicar answered the door to the police who were embarrassed about the whole incident.

Books



I watch my nieces and nephews who are constantly on their phones and I hear the narrative about them becoming anti-social as a result. They don't talk to the people around them but they communicate with other people their parents might think undesirable.
I was just the same. I was always reading a book Even before I could read I had a marvellous book about King Arthur and his Knights which had lovely colour pictures. It was to be the first book I read. I remember the opening sentence which was “The people of Britain were sad because their good kind Uther was very old and ill.” I couldn't pronounce the word 'people' and my siblings never put me straight when I read it out loud.
I went on reading out loud into my early teens. Nobody in my family seemed to mind.



Saturday, March 02, 2019

The unasked question

This poem is by Derek McMillan (and Omar Khayyam - but he doesn't need the money!)

"Here with a Loaf of Bread beneath the Bough,
A Flask of Wine, a Book of Verse - and Thou
Beside me singing in the Wilderness -


"The whiteness of this loaf cannot surpass the whiteness of thy breast
Though wine be red thy sweet lips put it to the test


"No mere poem can to thy beauty compare
Thy singing fills my heart and beautifies the air


"Yet the wilderness is far from home I fear...."
"It's OK Omar I'll drive, I know the way from here."


"And Wilderness is Paradise enow."












Friday, February 22, 2019

Citizenship revoked

If the government can revoke citizenship at the drop of a tabloid, presumably very few of us are safe. 

My father was born in Canada in 1914. I have had British nationality all my life. The new dispensation means I could be deported to Canada, Canada could say ‘not on your nelly’ and I would be up that well-known creek without a paddle. 

It is not only Shamima Begum’s rights which are on the line. Javid is attacking the rights of thousands of citizens in the UK. He has been described as a 'human shield’ for May's right-wing policies. It is no accident that the majority of the citizens affected will be from racial minorities - the very target of May's disgraceful 'hostile environment'.




Lord Acton observed that "all power tends to corrupt, absolute power corrupts absolutely." Javid was a Tory to start with, so he began from a low baseline. However this latest display of arrogance takes the biscuit.

People have had enough of this government. They can go. They never will be missed!





My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Not-so Magnificent Seven

Billionaire Blair once had a vice-like grip on the Labour Party. Internal democracy was destroyed. Labour's Socialist objective was erased from the constitution, an orgy of privatisation followed, and a vicious imperialist war against Iraq led to thousands of unarmed civilians losing their lives.

To have the support of seven traitors is not all that magnificent in comparison. To read the Sun and the Daily Mail you would think this was the death of the Labour Party. On the contrary, to coin a phrase, "better out than in".

And any socialist would curl up and die of shame to be supported by the right wing press and fawned over by the BBC.

The honourable course would be to stand for re-election and see if the voters really want them but they are not the people for honourable courses. Chuka Amunna's volte-face on the issue of anti-semitism is a case in point.


My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Saturday, February 16, 2019

Heroes and Villains

John Mcdonnell's comments about Churchill's role in Tonypandy has sent the right-wing media and - to their shame - the BBC into hysterical fits. And yet the facts cannot be disputed, Churchill sent troops against striking miners. The odious Nicholas Soames leapt to Churchill's defence but failed to mention any of the historical events involved.Instead he implied that Churchill had single-handedly won the Second World War.

History is not made by heroes or villains and very few people can be summed up by one word.

Churchill did not originally oppose Fascism, he gave his wholehearted support to Mussolini in his "triumphant struggle against the bestial appetites and passions of Leninism."

No one person was responsible for the outcome of the war, millions were involved and millions died, many of them Russian. Presumably they had the "the bestial appetites and passions of Leninism," which Churchill so disliked.

It was, as Soames presumably forgets, a *world* war. It was not a single-handed conflict.





My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Wednesday, February 06, 2019

This is Going to Hurt - Comedy and tragedy judiciously mixed

I think this is like several works of flash fiction in one book (except that it is non-fiction) and the diary format enables the writer to do that. 

The anecdotes elicit a range of responses. Some of them will cause you to p*ss yourself laughing (incontinence pads are available). Others will make you think about the ridiculous hours junior hospital doctors are working and wonder whether this is good for patient safety (it would seem not). The argument that "it was ever thus" gets short shrift. 

There are stories which will simply make you wince on behalf of the patients and some that are heartbreaking as well.

I enjoyed reading this book and I will not be giving any spoilers. I would just suggest that Adam Kay doesn't become an advertising copywriter for Jack Daniels or a bodyguard for Jeremy Hunt.


Adam Kay defends the NHS against the privatisers and he does it in a witty and engaging way. 

My page on Amazon


Click here to read more 

Apparently, Amazon does not differentiate between book and other reviews, so you will find a review of my shoes here too!





Tuesday, February 05, 2019

Civil War over Brexit?

The Worthing Journal compared the dispute over Brexit with the English Civil War, Readers were asked to comment. I did, you can too.

I think both Remainers and Leavers have to admit that they *do not know* what the economic consequences of leaving or remaining will be. Britain could still leave the EU - a corrupt and unpopular institution - but remain in a customs union. Nobody voted to "leave Europe" that would be physically impossible.

I find the insults of Remainers objectionable. They imply (or indeed state) that anyone who voted differently is ignorant and stupid. That is not the way to gain votes for their cause

(My spelling checker wants me to replace "Remainers" with "remainders" but I won't). 



(The Levellers were the real democrats in Cromwell's army. I realise that as a Catholic the Roundheads might not have welcomed me with open arms but the fact is that "religious freedom for Catholics" was one of the original demands of the Levellers)

My page on Amazon

Monday, February 04, 2019

May RIP?



Political obituaries for May have been written prematurely. Now she goes to the EU with demands they have rejected in advance and she will be glossed as the gallant leader standing up to the Eurocrats.  She has learnt that politics doesn't have to make sense, just satisfy the parliamentary Conservative party.



Backstop?

@theipaper has decided my name is Denis McMillan 😀

My page on Amazon

Monday, January 28, 2019

Brexit Schmexit

The "Today" program on Radio 4 is getting ridiculous. John Humphrys has been castigated for saying the Irish Republic should join the UK. This firecracker was probably intended to liven up an interminable debate. I don't believe it would be a good idea. I would wager good money that John Humphrys doesn't either.

The BBC continues to push ad nauseam the story of the shortages of food and medicines which will 'inevitably' follow Brexit. There are only two problems with this crystal-ball gazing: a) nothing is inevitable except death and taxes b) the only shortages will be a result of gross incompetence on the part of the Tory government.

Posh Dave called a referendum with the intention of outfoxing his Eurosceptic opponents in the Tory Party. Instead the result was that Posh Dave had to resign and Theresa May took over.

Before anyone applauds, it is worth remembering May has been the worst Prime Minister since Margaret Thatcher. She has pandered to the worst racist elements by her "hostile environment" policy towards migrants. And for any Tory the main enemy is their own poor. Universal Credit has been a universal disaster driving down living standards and making more business for the ubiquitous food banks which are an index of the Tories success in waging war against those least able to defend themselves.

Most recently May has supported the US attempts to unseat the government of Venezuela. US-backed regimes do not have a particularly good track record.

As the CWI has pointed out (http://www.socialistworld.net/index.php/international/americas/venezuela/10089-venezuela-for-mass-mobilization-of-workers-to-build-real-socialism-and-put-an-end-to-corrupt-bureaucracy)



"Latin American governments that stand out for their reactionary and antisocial policies and their servility to Washington enthusiastically support the coup while cynically claiming to stand “for democracy.”

"You only have to see who leads this ‘Holy Alliance’ to understand what is at stake: the Colombian president Duque (linked to Urribe narcoparamilitarismo), the Ecuadorian President Moreno (The Judas of the Ecuadorian left) President Macri (responsible for the brutal cuts that have provoked the Argentine people to rise up on their feet and fight) or the Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández (organizer of an electoral fraud with the support of the White House last year and responsible for the repression and murder of dozens of protesters).

"As is to be expected applauding enthusiastically from the other side of the Atlantic are the European right and far right in Spain with Pablo Casado from the PP, Albert Rivera (Cuidadanos) and the fascistic elements of Vox in the front.line."

Nice friends Theresa May has.

If Brexit can remove this blot from the landscape it will be no bad thing. However, the Blairite policy of a second referendum is mainly motivated by the fact that a general election would expose the complete uselessness of 'bog-standard' Blairites like Alistair Campbell.

A general election would bring to the fore the issue of austerity. A victory for "Remain" in a referendum would be a green light for the EU policy of austerity which was imposed on Greece. And a victory for "Leave" would be a green light for more of the same from the British Tories who never needed any encouragement to attack the living standards of the working class.



.

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Tombland

Tombland
CJ Sansom
ISBN 978-1447284482

"Tombland" is the latest of the Shardlake series by C.J. Sansom. It is a murder mystery set in the 16th Century. There are no spoilers in this review about who the murderer was. However, the story is set against the real historical background of the Kett rebellion.

In the reign of Edward VI (when real power resided with his uncle, the Duke of Somerset who reigned in his name) the gentry and yeoman farmers had taken to enclosing land and giving it over to sheep. They forced small farmers off the land which was also given over to sheep production. Not only did the people lose the use of common land for their own sheep but agriculture was devastated. 

As a result of a disastrous war with Scotland and the debasement of the currency prices rose out of control while wages stagnated.

One Norfolk yeoman farmer, Robert Kett, was approached by rebellious commoners who demanded he remove the enclosures he had made. Not only did he do so but he ended up leading the rebellion in Norfolk which became the largest of its kind in the country.

An estimated force of 16000 rebels set up a massive camp on Mousehold Heath to the North of Norwich. Under Kett's leadership, the rebels stormed Norwich and took the city. The workers in the city sympathised with the rebels and assisted the takeover. The forces of the aristocracy thought the rebels would be a walkover and sent an army against them under the Marquess of Northampton. He was comprehensively defeated.

The rebels however had faith that the government genuinely intended to deliver on its promise to end illegal enclosures. That is a bit like expecting the 1 percent to act in the interests of the 99 percent. Instead the King's army under the Earl of Warwick was sent to massacre the rebels with the aid of 1200 mercenaries.

The story is a useful antidote to books and TV series about the pomp and ceremony of the Tudor court and the intrigues of the aristocracy. The flip side of that coin was the unimaginable brutality with which aristocrats like Warwick treated the commoners. He only stopped because the gentlemen did not fancy putting their own hands to the plough so repentant commoners were spared.

Even a book about the 16th Century has a valuable lesson. Not only does it show the power of the common people to fight for justice but also the perfidious nature of the upper classes.

Thursday, January 17, 2019

Page and Spine - the Derek McMillan page

Page and Spine - the Derek McMillan Page. Someone has done their homework! I edited "Pieces of Eight" I wrote some of the stories I didn't write all of it. 
I can't take credit for "Death Agony of Capitalism" either but I did write an intro and notes on Trotsky's classic. The rest are mine.

https://www.pagespineficshowcase.com/derek-mcmillan.html

The link is here

Tuesday, January 15, 2019

About Worthing Flash

The blog, http://worthingflash.blogspot.com has been going since 4th July 2018. It was launched at an event at the Chichester Festival. However, the people who attended that event were from Worthing so I think it would be a good idea to hold an event in Worthing, for example at St Paul's, on 4th July to showcase your flash fiction.

I appreciate some of our writers are from India, New Zealand, Nigeria and the United States so this is a call to those a little nearer to home.

For a change this year I would invite members of the audience to bring their own flash fiction (stories of less than 1000 words, sometimes a lot less) so they can participate more.

I promise faithfully that I will not use a powerpoint!

I will go ahead if I have volunteers to take part. This is your cue to volunteer. email me on derekmcmillan1951@gmail.com

If a lot of people cannot make 4th July but (for example) 3rd July then we can probably compromise on that. We have a reasonable amount of time.

I was proposing to sell tickets on the door for 1 pound which will not break the bank!

Derek McMillan



Les Miserables

The character played by Dominic West, prisoner 24601, Jean Valjean, dominates the narrative of the BBC production of Les Miserables. There are no spoilers in this review but his fate represents the incredible injustice of the regime in France and the appalling treatment of the poor in the wake of the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo.

Fantine and her impossible task of keeping her daughter and her job is brilliantly portrayed by  Lily Collins. If the poor in general had a rough deal in that period, the working class women suffered it twofold.
The vicious behaviour of Javert, the policeman played by David Oyelowo is a personalisation of the cruelty of the law.

Those familiar with the musical version will remember the comic roles of Thernardier and his wife. The dark side of the characters is much more to the fore in this adaptation. However, the scene in episode three where Mrs Thernadier (Olivia Colman) is making a game out of beating Cosette to the great amusement of the clientele of their inn is brilliantly choreographed. It is a situation in which the laughter of the audience is crueller than the actions of the actor.

For all the darkness, the novel and this adaptation both offer a message of hope. Jean Valjean's personal struggle for redemption could be a metaphor for the redemption of French society which the revolutionaries of the day, like the Gilet Jaune of today, seek to bring about.

Socialists should be inspired by this story.

Derek McMillan

Monday, January 07, 2019

WSO Viennese New Year Concert


We attended the Worthing Symphony Orchestra Viennese New Year Concert in the Assembly Hall on Sunday 6th January.

The concert was a blend of the familiar and the unfamiliar. There were a total of four works by Johann Strauss the Second and one by Johann Strauss the First (the Radetzky March). The common theme of the music was gaiety.

Leon Jessel's "March of the Tin Soldiers" was included. The program recorded the fact that his work was banned in Germany and Austria because of his Jewish ancestry.

Perhaps the most unexpected addition was the inclusion of "The Teddy Bear's Picnic" by John W Bratton as the penultimate work.

The whole evening was a wonderful experience.

Conductor, John Gibbons did an excellent job although he did tend towards the anecdotal. The audience went away knowing more about his rose garden than they realised they needed to know.

Saturday, January 05, 2019

The BBC? Misleading?

You will be as shocked as I was to find the BBC being misleading. And it was about Brexit - they talk of little else.

Polly Toynbee of the Social Democrats was giving instructions to the Labour Party  as is her habit and she said that a majority of Labour voters supported Remain.

In fact in 60 percent of Labour seats the majority was for "Leave" and the electoral system means that winning seats is what counts in a general election. You might think she would know that.