Saturday, April 25, 2020

Consider yourself at home

Chanctonbury Chorus have asked for new lyrics to this song from "Oliver".
I have a modest example here.

Consider yourself at home
Consider yourself stuck with the family
The Cobra edict's so strong
You're all just going to get along
Consider yourself well in
Consider yourself part of the furniture
Consider yourself a chair
Who cares?. It's better than being out there!
If it should chance to be
We should see
Some harder days
Empty larder days
Why grouse?
If there's a chance we'll get
Sainsbury
To foot the bill
Then the drinks are on the 'ouse!

Consider yourself our mate
We don't want to have no fuss,
For after some consideration, we can state
Consider yourself
One of us!


Thursday, April 23, 2020

Happy St George's Day




A bit fanciful to picture Trotsky as St George but it must be galling to the English Nationalists that St George was, in fact, Turkish and probably had a Palestinian mother Happy St George's Day everybody!



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

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Tories in crisis

BBC News presenter Fiona Bruce was bouncing around like Tigger when she was announcing the Tory "landslide" victory in the election. She used the word landslide more times than I could count.

She is not so chipper now. Those pesky news reporters keep coming up with stories which discredit this government. 

Whether it is the lack of PPE for NHS staff and care-home staff, the Trump-like underestimation of the C-virus and its "sombrero" or the simple dishonesty of 90 per cent of government claims to be "working round the clock" and "ramping up" this that and the other, there is nothing for Tories to be smirking about now.

As for Question Time, she has turned it into a Party Political Broadcast for the Conservative Party and that was not the original intention. It was supposed to appear impartial whether it was or not. 

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

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Pelf and Place

In spite of the problems of NHS staff and care staff risking their lives and not getting the PPE they need, in spite of all the other evidence of the incompetence of this Eton mess of a government, Keir Starmer has found time to wish the Queen a happy birthday. Isn't that sweet?

Is his mind fixed on pelf and place? Surely not. He's already got the knighthood. Perhaps there is a peerage in the pipeline?



Sunday, April 19, 2020

Thatcher’s children


If you receive a text like this it is a fraud. The government never inform you of pending tax rebates. Do not click on the link. You can report it to Action Fraud. 

What kind of person uses the C-virus as an opportunity to commit fraud, usually targeting the elderly and vulnerable?  They are Thatcher's children. For them, there is no such thing as society and the poisonous doctrine of Thatcherism suits them down to the ground. 
--

Friday, April 17, 2020

For a new workers' party

From the webpage of the Socialist Party
Dave Nellist, Coventry Socialist Party and former Labour MP
A leaked internal Labour report, a mammoth 851 pages in length, has detailed internal sabotage by senior party officials of Jeremy Corbyn's attempts to radicalise Labour policies.
The report - 'The work of the Labour Party's Governance and Legal Unit in relation to antisemitism, 2014-2019' - quotes from transcripts of thousands of emails and WhatsApp discussions between Labour's senior officials, particularly in the 2015-2018 era before the current general secretary, Jennie Formby.
The official report was drawn up, so its authors say, to provide context to the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) investigation into the party's handling of complaints of antisemitism.
It found no evidence that complaints of antisemitism were treated any differently to any other complaints, but that other work was prioritised for factional gains, such as the purge of Labour members prior to the 2015 and 2016 leadership elections.
It claims senior officers, at Labour's head office, deliberately worked against the party's attempts to win the 2017 general election, in the expectation that defeat would lead to a third leadership contest and that Jeremy Corbyn could be initially replaced by Tom Watson, then deputy leader.
In particular, the report claims party finances were routed to right-wing, anti-Corbyn MPs and parliamentary candidates; with some funds being controlled through a separate office, in "a parallel general election campaign" to hide their destination from Corbyn and his staff.
When the result of the 2017 election was the Tory government's loss of majority, one senior official is quoted as saying Labour's better than expected outcome (which would mean Corbyn was unlikely to resign) was the "opposite to what I had been working towards for the last couple of years".
There are numerous communications detailed in the report between senior right-wing officers describing activists in abusive terms - for example hoping that one "dies in a fire", to which another official replies "wish there was a petrol can emoji".
Senior staff working directly for Jeremy Corbyn are described in pejorative and misogynistic terms. Jeremy Corbyn himself is described in June 2017 by Labour's then head of political strategy as "a lying little toe rag".
Two of the frequently quoted officials, both then at director level, now work at senior levels in Unison; one was suggested, in several media stories in February, to be a possible candidate under Sir Keir Starmer for Labour's next general secretary!
The Socialist Party argued right from Jeremy Corbyn's first victory as Labour leader in September 2015 that attempts to transform Labour's previous Blairite trajectory would fail unless the composition of the Parliamentary Labour Party, and of Labour's own internal machine, were also transformed.
Not restoring mandatory reselection for MPs left most right-wingers in place. And, as this report indicates, not acting decisively against the right-wing machine at the top of Labour's structures meant that the Corbyn project was doomed to failure.
Keir Starmer's election as Labour leader, together with the restoration of right wingers to leading positions, has pleased those capitalists who viewed the Corbyn era with fear, and now relish Labour being transformed back into a safe 'second eleven'.
Labour, union, and socialist activists must now start a discussion on the need for a new mass workers' party with a socialist programme, and how that can be built.


https://smile.amazon.co.uk/Socialist-Reviews-Mr-Derek-McMillan/dp/153905019X/



Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Sherlock Holmes

The press reports that Sir Keir Starmer is investigating whether right-wing Labour bureaucrats were too busy attacking Jeremy Corbyn to deal with the issue of anti-semitism.

He might have to call in Sherlock Holmes.

While he is investigating whether the right wing opposed Jeremy Corbyn, he might as well try to find out whether the Pope is a Catholic and what exactly bears get up to in the woods.  


Sir Keir's conciliatory tone towards this criminally incompetent government militates against taking them to task for their manifold failures:
  • Testing or the lack of it..
  • Personal Protective Equipment for NHS staff.
  • Personal Protective Equipment for Care Home Staff.
  • A snail's pace approach to getting money to families which desperately need it.
  • An initially casual approach followed by frantically handing out new police powers like sweets.
  • A proposal to re-open schools without any serious precautions to protect pupils and staff.
The government's incompetence is no accident. When Tories talk about defending the NHS they usually have their fingers crossed. The NHS is a Socialist concept. Without the trade union sponsored MPs it would never have come into existence. Any Socialist concept is anathema to the Tories and the more they talk about "ramping things up" the more transparent their class interests become.


Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Rise of the police state


1) The police asked people to report anyone who broke the rules (taking the dog out twice for instance). 
2) People did. 
3) The police were overwhelmed by the number of calls. 
4) They told people to go away and confront their neighbours instead. 

Still, it could be worse: "In a video recorded for the region of Campania, President of the southern Italian region Vincenzo De Luca threatened those planning to throw graduation parties with police armed with flamethrowers coming to their house." (Daily Express - I don't usually quote them!).

I repeat: giving the police greater powers is a cover for the government's continued failure to provide testing and proper protective equipment. They will do anything, including the blatantly ridiculous, to divert attention from this continued abject failure.

Keir Starmer would be better off taking the Eton Mess in Downing Street to task than attacking Jeremy Corbyn under the fake pretext of anti-semitism.

Evenin' all

 

Monday, April 13, 2020

TORY BASTARD ALIVE

I didn’t want Boris Badenough to die, the media would have made him a martyr, the Sun would have made him a saint. However TORY BASTARD ALIVE is not the headline to cheer people up.

The NHS is good news for the prime minister of course. However, Boris is a fan of Churchill and if Churchill had his way there would be no NHS.

Churchill's Tories voted against the formation of the NHS 21 times before the act was passed, including both the Second and Third reading.


Churchill believed that the NHS was a"first step to turn Britain into a National Socialist economy."

The NHS is still desperately short of protective equipment and the Tory gratitude does not extend to providing it. Handouts to the rich remain their top priority. 

Sunday, April 05, 2020

Sunday Times and the Profiteers

The Sunday Times has the following exclusive story:

The owners of the ExCeL centre in east London are charging the NHS millions of pounds in rent to use it as a temporary hospital for coronavirus patients.

The ExCeL, owned by the Abu Dhabi National Exhibitions Company (Adnec), is charging the health service £2m-£3m a month, according to industry sources.

The Nightingale Hospital London, the first of several temporary facilities planned, was opened by the health secretary, Matt Hancock, on Friday. 

Focussing on one profiteer, the Sunday Times continues to defend the capitalist system which makes this profiteering inevitable.


Thursday, April 02, 2020

Do Not Resuscitate


Toby Young, described by the Daily Record as a "pound shop Peter Hitchens" has laid bare the thinking of the Conservatives. He takes the view that it is a waste of money to keep old people alive. Of course, Toby Young is rapidly becoming old himself.

Thanks to Tory cuts, the NHS is unable to cope with the "normal" needs of the population and they are already talking about the "tough decisions" which will have to be taken.

GPs have been advised to consider "Do Not Resuscitate" discussions with elderly patients. One practice (Llynfi Surgery in Maesteg, South Wales) jumped the gun somewhat by sending out a note to patients saying that those with a life-limiting illness should opt for DNR.

One patient told Sky News,  "...It made me feel worthless. I've lived with cancer for eight years and I want to live another couple of years. I'm not digging my grave yet."

The advice is that GPs should have *discussions* with elderly patients. That is different from bullying them to sign a DNR form. That is different from making people feel worthless.

The original text of the Hippocratic Oath contains the phrase, "I will use treatment to help the sick according to my ability and judgment, but never with a view to injury and wrong-doing. Neither will I administer a poison to anybody when asked to do so, nor will I suggest such a course."  This is often shortened to "do no harm".

The government's pathetic failure to "ramp up" testing for the virus is part and parcel of Toby Young's thinking. It is much cheaper not to test and if old people die as a result that's all to the good in his twisted philosophy.

When all this is over it is the Tory government which will need resuscitating and the public might consider DNR in that case.

Derek McMillan is a writer in Durrington-on-Sea.
He has written 11 works of fiction and 7 works of non-fiction including Socialist Reviews

Wednesday, April 01, 2020

Police State

In the Peak District over-zealous police officers reacted to new powers like Tigger with a new toy. They poured foul black dye into a picturesque lake to discourage tourists. The likely effects on wildlife and the environment were less important than being tough. 

Even the rightwing journalists of the Spectator have been constrained to criticise the police for the ludicrous overreaction to gaining new powers in the C-virus crisis.

This is the article

" 'A hysterical slide into a police state. A shameful police force intruding with scant regard to common sense or tradition. An irrational overreaction driven by fear.' These are not the accusations of wild-eyed campaigners, they come from the lips of one our most eminent jurists Lord Sumption, former Justice of the Supreme Court."
 

Giving the police extra powers under any pretext is a stupid move. It is a knee-jerk reaction to the government's previous refusal to take the C-virus seriously and their continued failure to protect key workers from the virus.

The police themselves have suffered from Tory cuts and they have had many officers taken out of the equation by self-isolation. However, there are some police officers for whom brute force and ignorance is the only solution for any problem.

To give Boris Badenough (and therefore his puppet master Dominic C) dictatorial powers for an unlimited period will be an example of a cure being worse than the disease.

The working class (mainly the trade union and political activists) will draw the appropriate conclusions from the abject and pathetic failure of capitalism to cope with the C-virus.

It is a good thing, for example, that NHS staff are no longer being charged for parking at NHS hospitals. The scandal is that they were ever charged in the first place. And Boris Badenough supported every austerity measure which made such penny-pinching inevitable.

Capitalism is incapable of dealing with this crisis. The profits of billionaires like Branson are more important than the lives of key workers. Socialism could be the only way out of this situation. Listen to how people are talking in the street. This system has let them down catastrophically and the Labour movement needs to provide answers.




Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Criticising the Rep

In theory, the school union rep is elected annually and no doubt there are schools in which this actually happens. More frequently the rep turns up at the meeting and announces they can no longer do the job for family/workload/sanity reasons and calls for volunteers to take over.
Everybody sits on their hands.
The rep is persuaded to stay on for another year. Often there is applause.
One of the growing number of headteachers who are union members was invited by mistake to a government seminar for heads. The speaker, a master of the flip chart, made a list of the problems which heads have to contend with. One was “the union rep.”
The union head innocently asked how this problem should be dealt with. They were told “load them with more and more work until they shut up.” Other heads laughed at this excellent joke.
The union head did receive an apology after the event but the attitude which led to this faux pas is still unfortunately with us.
There is another role in the union, that of criticising the rep. This is one for which there is no end of volunteers.
Did anyone deduce from this that I ended up being the union rep? It was, in fact, a very positive experience but there was a downside as I have indicated.


Monday, March 30, 2020

Socialist Party online meeting

The Brighton Socialist Party has invited me to a meeting tomorrow. It will be an online meeting (obvs) and will be about the lessons of the Poll Tax campaign.




Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Beyond the barricade, is there a world you want to see?












This is a first-class film. We were surprised to come out of the cinema and find out it had been three hours since we went in. The momentum of the film never stops and there are some fantastic performances by Hugh Jackman as the convict, Jean Valjean, Anne Hathaway as the sacked factory worker, Fantine and Russell Crowe as police officer, Javert, . The comic talents of Helena Bonham Carter and Sasha Baron-Cohen provide a counterpoint to the serious side of the story.

“Les Miserables” (powerful words inadequately translated as “the poor”) are the focus of the original story. It is not a narrative Hollywood was likely to like. Tom Hooper concentrates on the romance at the expense of the social message. Nevertheless, they have not succeeded in emasculating the story.

The story, based on a two-volume 19th Century novel by Victor Hugo is not miserable at all because it contains within it a message of hope that things can be changed.

It is worth comparing the revolutionaries in Les Miserables with those other revolutionaries in a 19th Century novel – the bloodstained monsters depicted in Dickens’ “A Tale of Two Cities.” Although the revolution of 1830 was defeated, Victor Hugo sees the revolutionaries as human beings and evokes sympathy for the cause for which they are fighting.

To say it is a revolutionary film would be pushing it. It is a film about revolution and about the appalling injustices of society but the message is about individual salvation through love.

The central character, Jean Valjean, is imprisoned for five years for stealing a loaf of bread, then another 14 for trying to escape (not an exaggeration of the penal code of the period). On release he is condemned to carry a yellow passport – an ID card which is as effective as a brand. Even outside the prison, he is not free.

A priest  seeks to redeem him with an act of kindness and (without retelling the whole story) the narrative rests on the consequences of that act of kindness.

Perhaps the most shocking aspect of the original story is the casting of a policeman, a perfectly respectable upholder of the law with no sympathy for the poor, as a villain. We are accustomed to seeing “crooked cops” but Javert isn’t crooked; he is as straight as he can be according to his lights. He simply enforces an unjust law because it is not his place to change it.

The most powerful scenes involve the street fighting in Paris during the 1830 revolution and the idealism of students and young people who are depicted as simply and selflessly fighting for the poor of their own city.

“Do you hear the people sing?
Singing a song of angry men?
It is the music of a people
Who will not be slaves again!
When the beating of your heart
Echoes the beating of the drums
There is a life about to start
When tomorrow comes!”

Without the music the words give you some idea of the emotions stirred by the powerful song. I am aware that people talk cynically about “not a dry eye in the house” but it really is an accurate description of how people in the audience respond to this.

In the final scene the selflessness is rewarded when, with Les Miserables, they ascend to heaven. Dickens, for all his compassion, would have had them going to the other place!

The same songs are repeated with a different emphasis at different times in the film but the message of what happens when society offers no future to the poorest members of the community could not be clearer. We really will all be in it together!

“At the end of the day there's another day dawning
And the sun in the morning is waiting to rise
Like the waves crash on the sand
Like a storm that'll break any second
There's a hunger in the land
There's a reckoning still to be reckoned and
There's gonna be hell to pay
At the end of the day!” 





Sunday, March 22, 2020

C Virus - windfall for profiteers

Whether you are under house arrest, self-isolating or just working from home, that C virus has a lot to answer for.

Yet it is an ill wind that blows nobody any good. Budgens supermarket has attracted media attention by hiking the price of a toilet roll by 60 percent. All the supermarkets are expanding their workforce in hope of making a killing (no pun intended). Will their underpaid employees benefit from the largesse of the millionaires who own the supermarkets? This is not likely.

The government's response to the C virus has been to hand out money to the rich with the promise that some of it will trickle down to the working class. In the past, such schemes have always seen the money remain attached to the sticky fingers of the millionaires. They didn't get where they are today by being generous to their employees.

McDonalds, before they were forced to close, were trying to get their employees to work without basic protection like hand sanitiser. You can bet the bosses were well protected from the virus.

As reported in The Socialist Richard Branson has demanded billions from the taxpayer while insisting the people who make his money for him can manage without any for eight weeks.

And if the working classes start getting uppity because they are not being paid? Boris Badenough has 20000 troops on standby, just in case.

The TUC has been co-operating with the government. It is time for the union leaders to take the government warmly by the throat and insist that the working class should not pay the price for this crisis.

If the TUC were to get off its knees it would find there is a lot of support in the country. Listen to what people are saying in the supermarket queues. There is a lot of anger which needs to be channelled by the Labour movement.

The Socialist Party has proposed a Workers' Charter to fight the C Virus. The link is here





Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Mercy for Weinstein?

Weinstein’s lawyers say he should get mercy because he gave money to charity? So did Al Capone, do did the Krays. Surely he should get as little mercy as he showed his victims. 

Since I wrote this, Weinstein has been sentenced to twenty three years inside and the arguments of his expensive lawyers fell flat.

As the #metoo movement has indicated, there are a lot more Weinsteins out there and this sentence should make them afraid.



Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Rather Be the Devil by John Rankin


I enjoyed reading this book. I find the character of Rebus interesting and his attitude towards Police Scotland refreshing. He bends every rule he can find but could not be described as a bent cop.


I find the descriptions of locations add to the credibility of the narrative. I enjoyed the twists in the tale.

This is a book you would enjoy if you like detective fiction which is not full of graphic sex and violence which is a turn-off for oldies like me.

Monday, March 09, 2020

Free resources for teaching

I have had:
Reviews
31
Views
19393
Downloads
9917


These various resources are available on the TES website 
(The TES is not owned by Rupert Murdoch - just saying) 
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/helpline2 

It is referred to as a shop but all resources are free.





Thanks to all the people who downloaded resources from me and thanks too to those who bought "Classroom Teacher Manual" for the very reasonable price of £2.75 paperback or 0.99 for the Kindle edition.

Wednesday, March 04, 2020

Why you should be a trade unionist by Len McCLusky

Len McClusky's book “Why you should be a trade unionist” is a lively and accessible account of the role trade unionism has played in the past and the hope which workers' organisations provide for the future.
It answers in detail the question, “What have the unions done for us?” In particular, he praises those in the so-called “gig economy” who have organised and fought against some of the most vicious employers in the country and won significant victories.
It deals with some issues which are not usually thought of as trade union concerns. For example the Grenfell fire which he squarely blames on austerity cuts. “Union members were involved from the outset, supporting residents in the immediate humanitarian response. In those painful days after the tragedy we provided a vital link to the wider community, offering legal advice and representation to many residents, in what will be a long road to justice. Grenfell members have also received legal support from their unions in relation to housing, welfare and employment issues arising as a direct result of the fire – injustices that the mainstream media rarely notice.”
On “Unite Community” (of which I am a member) he writes, “This has become a fundamental part of our union’s political response to the Tories’ aggressive agenda of cuts. It has helped to ensure that we are at the forefront of political, industrial and community opposition to austerity. We invited not only the unemployed through our doors but all those not in paid work, including students, pensioners, disabled people, volunteers and carers. This is undoubtedly without precedent in British trade unionism and it adds another dimension to the union’s strength, because giving people not in work the opportunity to find their own voice assists us industrially.”
Whether it is dealing with anti-union bosses like Ryan Air or the climate emergency, this is a text book for anyone interested in the future of society. I enjoyed reading it. It educated an old leftie like me and it can do the same for you.







Monday, March 02, 2020

Alternatives to Amazon

My books including "Socialist Reviews" are published on Amazon and I have used them for purchases which support Cafod. However, there is a growing move to tax Amazon or possibly expropriate them for tax dodging.

The latest trick on Amazon is to advertise attractive offers but then label them as "only available to Prime users" which means of course you have to pay over the odds for these "special offers".

However there are alternatives to using Amazon which you can always look at. They are detailed here:

https://www.ethicalconsumer.org/ethical-campaigns/boycott-amazon/shopping-without-amazon

Details of the campaign to tax Amazon to pay for social housing are here

https://www.seattle.gov/council/meet-the-council/kshama-sawant/tax-amazon

Before the Coffee Gets Cold

Time travel is fraught with paradoxes. These interconnected tales deal with those paradoxes in a logical way and tell a variety of human stories which will hold the interest of the reader. 

It is suitable for adults and young adults and written in an accessible style. I enjoyed reading this book. So will you.

Guide to Memoir Writing


This is a most informative book and it will help new writers and those who have been writing for longer than they care to remember. 

I think everyone has an "autobiography" they could write but this is distinct from the "memoir" writing in the title. You have a memoir in you. Think of Adam Kay's "Nightshift before Christmas" which entertained thousands of people as well as giving an insight into the work of a hospital doctor. 

You can do this too and this book will give you valuable advice on how to do so.