Tuesday, 7 June 2011

The Sexualisation Of Children



This morning I listened on and off to Call Kaye on Radio Scotland. The subject was the  sexualisation of children.  Only one mother mentioned she wanted to control the pace of her children's learning about sex. Others banged on about various main television channels permitted today's pop stars to 'pedal their wares'.

Most of the programme callers concentrated on pop star videos, billboard advertising and magazines; all of which the parents berated while the media industry are relaxed about it.

What I couldn't understand is why these parents were upset or were they the few who also disapproved the Section 28 of the Local Government Act, (section 122 in the rest of the UK).  It's my belief that the repeal of this Act contributed greatly to young children being indoctrinated into the world of sex at far too young an age though of compulsory education system.

I agree with homosexuality being included in sex education for seniors pupils but why didn't politicians revise the proposal to include an age guide?  The approval of Section 28 gave licence to anyone with enough political contacts to ensure that their specific aims were met.

We now teach sex education to 5-year-olds. Is it any wonder that today's young, by that I mean 5-12 year olds, parents think nothing of buying their children clothes which they think are 'fun'?

My favourite Scottish journalist, Iain Macwhirter protests about his young daughter singing the words to a Barbarian popstar.  Has Iain sighted the material is daughter is taught in school these days.  I doubt it.  He's a man who is trusting. I used to be trusting too.

When I was a teenager risque lyrics conveyed little.  They were part of the 'my pals understand what they mean and I must play along to be part of the crowd'. It reminds me of peer chat about the loss of virginity. It only took one pal to say she'd had sex to create a continual stream of those who made confessions over a Coke.  Strangely the other sexual partner was never named but to say "I've done it too", was enough to create awe and congratulation within your peer group.

Let me say here that I'm still in contact with the friend who first announced to our group that 'she'd done it'.  That was a lie she admits, but as teenagers in the 60s we felt, with the introduction of the pill, that we'd nothing to lose. The loss of our virginity to many of us in the 60s meant ' we had done IT' but usually sexual contact was a little, if not a lot, distant from intercourse.  I speak from a female's view of course and I'm sure many lads of my age boasted they'd 'cracked it', although my male friends never divulged their sex life.

Why is the Guardian so laid back about Bailey's report on the sexualisation of children?  I'm not smiling and I hope millions of parents aren't either. But then with some left wing believers anything goes so long as it doesn't affect their own.

God help us.

When Self-Medication Fails



I take full responsibility for my own health, but when my trusty version of self medication - a few Tio Pepes and couple of quality oatcakes smothered in a tasty smelly cheese - has no effect then I have to resort to the medical profession.  Today is one of these days so may I direct you to the new blog Independent Political Bloggers where there's always something of interest.

My own doctor is most pleasant.  She's young, keen and still interested in listening.  But today she's unavailable so I'm seeing another who will most likely treat me kindly, all the while thinking I'm a hypochondriacal, slightly paranoid, post-menopausal woman who expects to feel 40.

What's wrong with that?  It's a good deterrent to patronising GPs.

Monday, 6 June 2011

The Rumour Mill

Leuchers airbase

The shameful handling of the maritime surveillance aircraft Nimrod has wasted around £4billion of taxpayers' money and is the cause of the closure of the main maritime surveillance base at RAF Kinloss, although some insist the cancellation of production is money well wasted. Maybe so, but our coastlines need to be protected and without suitable aircraft the Westminster government has suddenly decided the safety of these islands is at risk.

With other countries now purchasing the Boeing P-8, the Westminster government is also thinking along these lines.  But from which base would they fly?  Liam Fox has already announced Kinloss is to be closed and he's been vocal about another base closing here, so it would appear the P-8, should they decided to go ahead, will operate from an English base.

Liam Fox is in no hurry to decided the future of the other two RAF bases in Scotland and says the decision will be made later this year, but rumour is rife here that the decision has been made to sell off RAF Leuchars. Of the two I'm in favour of Leuchars being sold because far less damage will be done to the local community. Of course the MoD isn't looking at these closures from a militarily strategic position but from one of financial gain.

To close RAF Lossiemouth would be the death warrant for an area of Scotland which, although very beautiful, isn't particularly accessible unless by private transport.  It also wouldn't be an 'easy' sell because of its position.

Leuchars has it all, which means it has a rail station (something of a novelty in small towns), a good bus service is easily accessed. It's near enough to Scotland's central belt to me within easy commuting distance and also only a few miles from St Andrews, perhaps one of Scotland's most famous towns - certainly one of the busiest here in the east.

Back to the rumour mill.  Last week it was said that Ryanair had been to check out the £27million new runway and other areas of the Leuchers base while those associated with Dundee airport have also been evident in the area.  Dundee airport is small and therefore the size of aircraft it can accommodate is limited while Leuchars can easily accept a Boeing 737.

The idea of Leuchars becoming a commercial airport is good news for this part of Scotland and even better news for lovers of golf who year round visit the shrine of the Old Course.

However, isn't it time Mr Fox made a U-turn about Kinloss also? It's common knowledge that Kinloss is in the best position to provide maritime surveillance and with Scotland having a third of the UK's coastline it makes sense to fly the P-8s out of that base.  Somehow I think a rethink about Kinloss's closure will be a step too far for Mr Fox and his cohorts.  Few politicians view this country in the long-term and that's part of the reason they waste billions of our hard-earned cash.

source

And So It Goes On ...



While William Hague posed with Libyan rebels in Benghazi stating he "was prepared to continue in Libya even if it had to continue for the rest of the year", another British soldier was killed in the Nahr-e-Saraj area of Helmand province.

The Royal Marine, from 42 Commando Royal Marines, was shot and killed yesterday morning while on patrol in Helmand province.  His death came only two days after Cpl Michael Pike, 28 and a father of two, was killed in the Lashkar Gah area.

370 British service personnel have now been killed during this futile war in Afghanistan.

Update:  The MoD has just announced the death of a soldier from 1st Battalion The Rifles.  He was killed in the Haji Kareen area of the Nahr-e-Saraj district.

His death bring the toll to 371.  I want no platitudes from politicians, I want decisions to withdrawn our troops from this unwinnable war.  It doesn't take a military expert to know that the Afghan people will live their lives as they wish, not as we wish.

Sunday, 5 June 2011

The Journeyman - Chapter 13



CHAPTER 13

Neil Hopkins closed his eyes and thought of England. Most of his staff was long gone, apart from the two financial analysts who’d be most of the night extracting the figures he wanted on Uniclor.

Gently rocking he eyed the lights still showing on the two top floors of the crescent shaped monolith that was ICP’s world head quarters. He still was at forty-nine ICP’s youngest Chief Executive. Through the late seventies and early eighties he’d been too busy sweating his plodding empire into a keener, leaner corporate machine, to bother with the individuals who’d allowed the fat to grow. Shortly he’d be able to get rid of the wasters that littered his boardroom.

These had been years of chance, change and opportunity on the corporate scene. Sympathetic government policies and weak unions allowed them to be rid of their UK chemical plants and to replace them with state of the art units in the emerging markets. That was a misnomer. None were emerging most were desperately running in order to stay in sight. Neil’s policy of not imperially sticking the ICP name on third world plants didn’t fool the analysts or the markets but it did give a home grown feel to the users. Now the products themselves were fast approaching their nemesis. Rumbles were growing on the health and ecological costs they’d accumulated. Insurers were beginning to twitch about exposure and in America the lawyers were bonding up for class actions. It was time to change the name, the product and the game.

In a world hungry for crops, most literally, the rest financially, he’d expanded ICP in both. Having expanded their North American turnover from three to eleven million a day. They’d used the increased revenue to buy a Californian based bank that had been draining the resources of Midshire; one of the UK’s big four. And, immediately after, when all Midshires weaknesses had been exposed, made a successful bid for it. The other UK clearers' had screamed their opposition to a move that would shatter the myth of their impregnability, but they hadn’t been willing to pay the price to call that tune. Once in the money shuffling game he’d the stake he wanted in the consumer market. It had also allowed him, though he’d vehemently deny it, the ability to nudge the fortunes of Midshires corporate borrowers. Most he’d been glad to see the back of when they were poached by his competitors and the same could be said for the original board. Replacing them with the best from the international scene, if they were too good to be yes men, they were certainly his men.

Two of the banks customers were already beginning to feel the demoralising effect of its concern. Both slipping in the supermarket league, they’d shortly be discussing a reluctant merger and once the rumours had created the necessary state of flux ICP would make its bid for both. This was all scheduled for the next twelve months but to do it he had to get his next move rock solid. Then he could tuck the markets under his belt and add a few more points of the UKs consumer spending into his corporate wallet. One more step towards unassailable control. Flicking a speck of dust off his trousers he rang security and told them to have his car ready.

Settling in to the black Mercedes, he instructed his driver to move round to the visitors parking keep the lights off and waited engine idling by the exit. The registrations of four expensive saloons leaving within ten minutes were noted before telling his driver to take him home.

Home was a modest Victorian house in what had been a modest area of Ealing. Bought when his Father had been forced into early retirement by the closure of the steelworks where he’d been general manager. His parents living with him allowed Neil to turn the top floor into his private flat while still enjoying the family atmosphere of a home. It was his antithesis for the emotionless actions of business. His parents knew the position he held but he doubted even his Father comprehended the power and personal wealth it had afforded him. Neither caused him any great pleasure, just as the simplicity of his private life had nothing to do with aesthetic or monastic reasons. It was enough to be comfortable. Any more was pure distraction.

Joining his Father for the late news he’d the one drink then left a note for his mother to remind her he was going to the country with Sir Reginald Huntington for the week end before going up to his flat and bed.

Friday morning he was up at five and on his way to the office by five thirty. It would give him almost two hours of privacy. George Esquiden didn’t expect Neil’s call. They’d already a meeting scheduled for three that afternoon to go through the final details of the sale to Thames of the fast food chain that had been the catalyst for ICPs’ raid into American and British banking. Esquiden was pleased with the formula he’d produced. It would show ICP making a profit on the sale while retaining all of Deltoni’s real estate. Thames would get the benefit of the streamlined administration and development that up to now had purely shown on the cost side of the balance sheets. Under the Thames banner they’d come out as improved if not spectacular returns, enough to earn Thames a success rating on their first international venture. But Neil’s call had nothing to do with that.

Listening to Neil, George played with the figures and the reactions they’d create and realised his day had just been hi-jacked. It took him over an hour of window gazing before he could get a grip on the scale of Neil’s proposal and the rest of the morning putting out tentative feelers into the banking world for reactions. Deliberately mirror imaging the proposition, he reversed the reactions until struggling through a working lunch he came up with a trainload of figures. It was possible but he wouldn’t want to put his career on line for it. Committing his draft to memory he fed the scraps of calculations to the shredder.

Esquiden had learnt early in his career two important skills. Leaving Harvard and finding himself junior to contemporaries with lesser qualifications who didn’t suffer the stigma of a Mexican Indian background, he’d learnt to read upside down as fast as he could from the normal viewpoint. The second was to hone his memory till it was almost photogenic. The first exposed a lot of strategies, the second allowed him to bank them until their purpose became clear. If George was a dreamer of possibles, he was a pragmatist in accepting the best plans all smelt the same if they landed in shit. One of the shitpools was the advance of Islamic fundamentalism and the effect it would have on the fundamentally fanatical financial markets.

It was during one of these crises that he’d met Neil and been persuaded to join Californian First. Expecting to stay with the bank for two-three years at the most enough time for its position to stabilise, his expectation changed before the first year was out. Hopkins asked him to fly to London for a meeting. It lasted less than two hours and an hour later George was on his way back and having to pinch himself into accepting the plane was going to land at an airport and not his bed. Told of the plan to get Midshire into the fold he was to be the ways and means arranger. His feelings now were much the same as they’d been on that first flight home. Almost, but not quite; then he’d only hoped to pull it off; now, knowing Hopkins, he expected to.

By four the Deltoni moves had been explained and approved. George got the distinct impression of Thames having little say in the matter and made a promise to himself to find out why. If Neil was pleased he didn’t show it, and by now George would have been surprised if he had.
     ‘Have you formed any opinion on this mornings proposal?’ Neil asked.
     George helped himself to a coffee before answering. ‘On paper it’s possible but the reactions and repercussions it could create is an entirely different set of problems. I need more time to build a picture on them. Your selling as near as dammit seventy percent of your chemical production; in fact all of it except for the three north American plants to a buyer who doesn’t know he’s buying yet. Christ Neil some of those plants have only just came on stream.’ He shrugged, ‘ So why am I stating the obvious? Okay, Uniclor will bite your hand off. Deerbrucker will drop his pants and spread his butt for you in front of an invited Wall Street audience and enjoy it. As for funding they should be able to raise it against the plants and markets you’re offering. Though by my reckoning you’ll have to hold twenty percent of their stock and nine’s too high. You might get that in an open market. Selling the lot to one buyer makes it his market so I think eight is more likely. As to getting it all tied up without the world and its aunt knowing, that’s yellow brick road thinking.’

Neil swung his chair round to his thinking position while his brain slipped the final digits into place. ‘All right George, eight it is. Ten percent maximum in stock and Californian First heads the funding with another ten. I’ll expect you to get the best terms on that ten as part of the price for selling cheap. Tell Deerbrucker there’s to be no ties on the shares by either side, nor do we want any board involvement. And secrecy is his problem. We’ll help anyway we can but if it gets out before we want it to, the deals dead.’

George stopped drawing circles round scribbled eights. ‘As I said it’s all possible but you know Firsts attitude to Uniclor. It hasn’t been favourable in the past and without being told why they’ll see little reason to change. And my gut tells me if they did know they’d be less inclined. Eight hundred million’s a lot to lend to your parent companies competitor.’
     ‘That’s why you get very good rates on the loan. One other point George just so your thinking’s clear. Uniclor are getting nothing, they’re buying and they have every right to buy, just as we have to sell. Lay it on the line with Deerbrucker and we’ll discuss his reactions on Monday. Oh! and George I haven’t told you the time scale yet.’

As he left Neil’s office all thought of a weeks break in his favourite Norway flew out of the window as, he suspected, had Neil’s common sense. Secrecy was hard enough to control when you had time on your side, squeeze the time and you can create a frenzy that haemorrhages theories. Expecting the deal to be done and dusted by Christmas was cool, if you believed in Santa. Asking, ‘How are you going to get this by the Board?’
Neil shrugged, ‘Politics. Enough to keep the spineless majority wavering. I expect I’ll have three months of the long knives, then I’ll be lauded by the same time servers.’ George decided to get on with it before he was led too far into the maze.

George had only cleared the foyer when Neil was listening attentively to his two financial analysts explaining their analysis for the take-over of Uniclor. The valuations and forecasts were accurate enough on today’s figures but in a short time and for a shorter time, they would be regarded as ludicrously low. He’d wait for the final stage when they’d be ludicrously high. In the meantime the exercise would feed the rumour mills and keep the board off his back.

Driving himself down to Bramshott in the evening, it wasn’t the Uniclor deal occupying his thoughts but the report he had from Spienz the head of his research unit. Subject to the completion of the Runcorn plant on time they could start dismantling the pilot plant in Mannheim. All he needed was the next few months to go as planned and a hectic New Year survived before a lot of people realised they were in a no win situation. Turning into Huntingtons drive he felt no compassion for the people it would affect. Just as if it didn’t work out they’d have none for him. These were the risks you took when developments forced the existing methods into the archives of history. To keep on modernising was only playing with fashion. New concepts required absolute commitment and the prize was too big to be bothered about protecting butts if things went wrong.

George Esquiden flew out of Heathrow at eight fifteen that evening. It had taken him twenty minutes on the phone to persuade Deerbrucker to rearrange his plans for Saturday and meet him for lunch. For Uniclor not to be interested was unbelievable. For them the offer was on a par with raising Lazarus.

For over a decade Uniclor had suffered from a series of disastrous accidents caused by badly maintained outmoded plants. Concentrating on a corporate survival program had let their research take a back seat in the allocation of funds. That and the bad P.R exacerbated by their insurers playing the legal game on the victims had induced most of their scientists to look for greener pastures. One of these pastures in the American club was ICP.

As his plane banked on its approach to Kennedy he gave instructions for it to be ready for a Saturday evening flight back. Better than staying and getting dragged into the dealing.

Lunch in the near deserted Portland club went much as expected. Deerbrucker as a man had presence, but as the CEO of Uniclor, hadn’t had the success to match it. Initially sceptical and suspicious he’d slowly allowed himself the luxury of warming to the possibilities, then to regard as impossible the time scale. Testing George he’d asked. ‘Why the hell can’t we announce it? It would make raising the funds a helluva lot easier. We’d have the market coming to us. Without that I just can’t see it happening.’
George had the better hand and they both knew it. ‘That’s as may be Dwight, but secrecy is an absolute stipulation so raiding the market’s right out. Think about it, secrecy’s no bad thing for you. If you don’t manage to raise the funds or you want to change your mind; you have until December to quietly withdraw and nobody but your backers are any the wiser. Go to the markets and if you were forced to call it off, or Hopkins calls it off you’ll have all sorts of wild speculations to handle. Especially if Hopkins lets out just how good a deal it was.’
     ‘Do him more harm than us.’
     ‘Bullshit Dwight. Every broker would think one of two things. Either you have a revolutionary new product about to be launched so the deals not needed and we know you haven’t. So it must be you don’t have the standing to buy top quality goods at bargain basement prices. That should have a dramatic effect on the value of Uniclor and you can’t afford to be hit again. Dwight this offer is more than a lifeline it’s the whole US cavalry coming to your rescue.’

Deerbrucker hadn’t agreed with George’s analysis, he’d have been surprised if he had. Outlining Uniclors alternatives, or rather the lack of them had struck the chord George had been searching for. Neil was a devious son of a bitch. While he had Uniclor chasing about desperate to raise the cash they’d be blind to anything else happening. At any time, but especially if they failed, ICP would be in the best position to sweep up the pieces. He left Deerbrucker with his final instructions. By Friday next the contract of intent would have to be signed for the purchase of twenty-six ICP plants for the sum of eight, thousand million sterling. Eight billion. He was amazed how easily the figure tripped off his tongue and he needed to get a new calculator that could handle the zeros.

©EoinTaylor

Links to all other chapters can be found here.

Two Wrongs Don't Make A Right



One more family received a very unwelcome knock at their door in the past 48 hours.  I expect two members of the Highlanders, 4th Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland (4 Scots) were standing on their doorstep to convey the heartbreaking news that their family member had been shot dead by insurgent gunfire in the Lashkar Gah District of Helmand Province on Friday.

It is believed that the soldier was on a partnered patrol with the Afghan National Police to reassure the local population when his unit came under attack by rifle, rocket propelled grenade and indirect fire from insurgents.

His death brings the total number of UK military personnel who have died in the Afghan war to 369.

May he rest in peace and to those who loved him I offer my condolences.

The talk of war brings me to the recent arrest of Mladic. Edward sent the following letter to his local paper. Reputedly the EU and NATO have the most professional PR departments in the whole of the West. As ever, the information relayed to the masses is not necessarily accurate. 

Sir,

    The capture of General Ratko Mladic has brought the Balkan situation to the fore again. Very successful EU and NATO propaganda has created an impression in the public mind which is at considerable variance from the facts.

    Readers might like to guess which Balkan leaders said or wrote the following:

A. "Genocide is a natural phenomenon in keeping with the human-social and mythological divine nature. It is not only commended but commanded by the Almighty..."

B."Protect brotherhood and unity...nationalism always means isolation from others, being locked in a closed circle and stopping growth..."

C."There can be no peace or coexistence between the Islamic faith and non Islamic institutions. The Islamic movement can and must take power as soon as it is morally strong enough, not only to destroy the non Islamic power but to build a new one...."

    The answers may surprise. They are:

A. Franjo Tudjman - leader of Croatia, backed by EU/NATO
B. Slobodan Milosevic - Serbian leader branded as "the butcher of the
Balkans" by EU/NATO
C. Alia Izetbegovic - Muslim leader of Bosnia, backed by EU/NATO

    So it is no surprise that things are not quite as portrayed with General Mladic. Atrocities there certainly were at Srebrenica but on both sides, as testified by the Canadian UN Commander, General Lewis Mackenzie. He states that the Muslim forces used the UN "safe haven" at Srebrenica as a base for murderous attacks against surrounding Serb villages in which thousands of civilians were killed.

    So when the Bosnian Serb forces arrived in the town, they were not in a forgiving mood and many murders undoubtedly took place but, as for the claim of 8,000 killed, "the math just doesn't add up". Neither does anyone committing genocide allow women and children safe passage - as Mladic's forces did.

    Whilst saying that two wrongs don't make a right, General MacKenzie believes that the Serbs were fooled into their attack to provide a pretext for NATO air strikes, rather like those in Libya today.

    I received corroboration of General Mackenzie's view in discussion with James Bissett who was Canadian Ambassador in Yugoslavia at the time.

    The Muslim Commander, General Nasir Oric, got off at the Hague tribunal but I doubt whether General Mladic will.

Yours faithfully,
Edward Spalton

Saturday, 4 June 2011

Take Your Pick



Labour/Fabian/Socialism ... You Failed

Greece, A Byronic Tragedy

The Cruellest Fiction

A useful lesson on how to write an email to a commercial business or a governmental department

Three cheers for Catholic Care

Idly Watching A Cypriot Marriage

Knowing Their Place

Referendum must be in-out

Inevitable Consequences or Planned?

A resident of Yorkshire vs a scorpion

The Care Home Business



I don't think anyone who watched this week's Panorama wouldn't have felt sickened - if not horrified - at the abuse dished out to our most vulnerable.

Yet we're brainwashed into believing social services know best - the same people who continue to remove those with 'social problems' from their environments to do, what the programme highlighted, 'assessments'.  Some of this is with family approval because these caring people think they could do better for their family member.  I do hope this programme has opened their eyes.

I also hope it's given younger generations food for thought about where they deposit their parent(s) who can no longer safely live in their own homes.  There have been many programmes about abuse in homes for the elderly in recent years and I know it's a heart breaking decision to place a parent in a home, but there are Homes and homes.

Here is Scotland, rather like England, homes for the elderly are supervised by a care organisation and Scotland's now calls itself SCSWIS. How can anyone know what that acronym means?  It's the Social Care and Social Work Improvement Scotland.  There are many other websites related to care of the elderly in Scotland and all express a devotion to the care of those in their last years. Nouns like 'dignity' and 'respect' are often used to emphasis how much we care about our aging, but words are meaningless when some care homes are nothing more than prisons where conformity is the steadfast rule.

The collapse of Southern Cross care homes and the potential tragedy for residents and staff has highlighted the private care home industry.  In Scotland the Elsie Inglis care home in Edinburgh voluntarily closed after being told to make 'urgent and immediate improvements'.  The home was being investigated by SCSWIS who said they had 'serious concerns; about standards of care.  Why didn't they close it down immediately?

Years ago I had quite a few dealings with what were then called homes for the elderly.  They were run by the local council and all provided an excellent quality of care.  Gradually they have all been sold to private buyers, many being large organisations, whose main aim is to provide large profits for their shareholders. I've undertaken voluntary work in a couple of private homes and the experience certainly opened my eyes.  Tea, the last meal of the day, was at 4.30pm and usually composed of sandwiches. "The elderly don't eat much" I was told.  The only other food available before breakfast was one standard-sized packet of either Rich Tea or Digestives to be dispensed between 35 residents along with their 7pm cup of tea. The kitchen was locked when the catering staff finished at 5.30pm and along with the biscuits was a small carton of milk which was divided between the two large teapots.  If, like me, you didn't like milk in tea it was a sake of take it or do without.

The homes in which I worked have changed hands over the years and I've no idea about the standards today, but those in which I worked were then graded as 'very satisfactory'.  I was young enough at the time to think I'll never ever come to such a place, but as I age I realise there is a possibility that I could have no choice.

What I've never understood is why our politicians think privatising care homes benefits the elderly. More councils in Scotland are privatising home care in response to budget cuts and we are drifting into a fully privatised service. Local authorities insist that providing care homes is too expensive and a drain on their resources.  When they sell a home it's short-term gain.

We need a debate about the care home business before more of our elderly suffer the distress associated with collapses such as Southern Cross. Northern Ireland is calling for the privatisation of their care homes because it could save as much as £50m a year.  A single tram line in Edinburgh has been funded by public money to the tune of £450m. Are our priorities wrong?  Should we be caring for our less-able elderly directly rather than paying private organisations?

Friday, 3 June 2011

A Cheap Answer To A Decent Lawn


The above was my main lawn in mid-April the day I scarified it. It had been under snow and ice for nearly three months.

Then I applied potato fertiliser - recommended by an old farming friend - and watered it in.  I kept it well watered during the warm spell and here it is this morning after a trim.



Not bad for a £11 tub of granules which I also used last year and I've just about enough for next year too.  Most garden centres don't sell potato fertiliser, although Dobies does, for obvious reasons (too cheap) but it can be purchased for a reasonable cost at any agricultural merchants.  Much better than buying expensive premium brands don't you think?

I feed my borders with it too.  Doesn't seem to do any harm and saves me hours of fun with a watering can and powered MiracleGrow. Sprinkle the granules and let the hosepipe do the watering in.  Before I started using this I used general fertiliser but this is giving better results.

Thursday, 2 June 2011

A Citizens' Initiative



Last week a letter in a Scottish newspaper caught my eye. My admiration of the writer knows no bounds as he has continued to contribute to the Scottish media for many a year.

His letter reiterates what some think is Scotland but not enough.  The Scots need to stop thinking government has all the answers because it hasn't. The people have the answers if they think hard enough and  our political representatives are there to listen to their views then attempt to dispense their desires.

Mr Orr's suggestion of a Citizens Initiative should not be scorned or disregarded. It should be seriously considered by the Scottish Government.

More power to the people  (source)
Sir, — Much has been written of the need for adequate checks and balances on the new SNP Government, which commands an outright majority. One such way is to transfer more power from the Parliament to the people.
So-called "Citizens' Initiatives" provide the means to do this, with mini-referendums being held once a certain number of names on a petition have been collected.
The Citizens' Initiative is a form of direct democracy common in the US, where it operates in almost half the states, and in Switzerland and New Zealand.
Voters in Zurich recently rejected proposed bans on "suicide tourism."
Implementing Citizens' Initiatives would revitalise our stagnant political process and restore credibility and trust in the political system, engaging people directly and giving them a real say on issues that matter most.
It is time we gave power back to the people and this direct democracy measure could do just this.
Alex Orr.
Leamington Terrace,
Edinburgh.

It's Time Dave Sorted This Out



Lord Taylor, a Birmingham born former barrister, was jailed for fraud this week.  He lied under oath about his expenses and a jury decided he was guilty.  Another Tory peer was found to be fiddling the taxpayer to the tune of £14,000 this week and will be sentenced shortly.

As a lass, in my naivety, I respected members of the House of Lords. They appeared as distant pillars of society who would do nothing but good for the masses.  I felt safe in their hands because they silently conveyed they knew what was good for me before I did and passively I accepted their words as the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

How some things change in a couple of decades. No longer is the Lords full of hereditary peers who consider it their duty to give some of their time to public service, but it's now overstuffed with not only the great and good but the not so good and the bad.

Life peerages are not technically an 'honour under the Crown' and cannot be withdrawn once granted, with the exception of treason covered in the Titles Deprivation Act (1917).

Surely it's long past time that new legislation was introduced to disrobe any life peer who has been found guilty of a criminal offence and given a jail term. I understand other titles can be removed by Royal consent and this would appear to be a reasonable deterrent.

It's time Dave sorted this out.

Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Formal Education - It Should Offer More


It's entertaining to see the MSM continue to put independence top of the political agenda here in Scotland and having Sky's Scotland correspondent, James Matthews, compile a rather shallow A - Z on the subject could be interpreted as a compliment. I note Mr Matthews lists E for exports, when E for education could be more appropriate.

The Centre for Scottish Public Policy published an excellent article by Ross Martin yesterday, 'How our teachers became a class apart', in which he suggests the resurrection of school boards which, suitably redesigned, would inspire parental involvement.

Back in my schooldays parents seldom visited the school but the connection between the classroom and school was a book called the Home Register. They were gathered by the teacher first thing in the morning and woe betide anyone who forgot to collect it prior to leaving at 4pm.  The book was designed like a diary and teachers noted anything in it which they thought would be of parental interest/concern.  A parent had to sign each day's entry to prove it had been read and many a pupil suffered embarrassment by being told, in front of their peers, that their forgery skills were sadly lacking. Usually it was decided just to face the music at home and the music could be melodic so the comments weren't all negative.

Of course such systems were stopped because they were dated and the valuable daily contact between parents and teachers was lost. My old school encourages parental attendance at many events throughout the school year yet these are impersonal although socially very pleasant. There are too many parents who feel detached from their child's schooling and this isn't good for a child's education.  Would the return of school boards assist with parent-school communication? It's worth a try.

Another excellent proposal is the School Characteristic Index ought to be available to the public. Why isn't it?  As Ross states league tables were scrapped in Scotland yet they were a base for parents to choose.

Education shouldn't be the privilege of any political party - it's far too important.  The quality of education a country delivers shows the quality of the whole population.  Scotland was once a world-wide leader.  What's gone wrong?

The Difference Between UK, GB And England



Wonderful material for David Cameron and the Unionists?  Pity about the presenter's approach. I won't comment on his accent because that would be quite unfair but I do wish he wasn't reading from a 'speed' script.

I had my paracetamol prior to publishing this but perhaps that's unkind.  It could be a good video for teaching purposes.

Thanks to the Filthy Engineer

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