Come And Be A New Hedonist!
New Designs All Over
Considering that I spent several hours making it, it is fairly unsurprising that I'm happy with the end result. There are a few little faults here and there, but I put a discrete 'beta' in the header to take care of those!
"It's Not That I Don't Like Scottish People..."
"It's not that I don't like Scottish people, I just find their accents very irritating on the radio."
There's more which you can hear on the listen again section of the R4 web-site for the next seven days.
I'm used to the fact that Radio 4 listeners spend most of their day with a notepad and pen, ready to write in to the BBC at the slightest hint of something different or, heaven forbid, a grammatical error, but when they start writing in about anyone other than a middle-class English person from the home counties presenting programmes, I'm always a little surprised.
A couple of years ago, a very experienced continuity announcer from the World Service transferred to Radio 4. He lasted for about two months. His crime: being Ghanaian on Radio 4! There were the same letters in to Feedback from people in Surrey calling for his immediate dismissal. The fact that he spoke very clear English just didn't seem to register to the traditional Radio 4 listeners. In fact, had this continuity announcer spoken without clarity, he would have never lasted at the World Service, a station which at that time had the majority of its audience listening on short wave.
The resistance to change on Radio 4 even extends to the stations branding. Recently, all BBC stations were given updated branding. If you visit the Radio 1, 2, 3, 5 Live, 5 Live Sports Extra, 6 Music, BBC 7, Asian Network and 1xtra sites, you'll find this new unified brand. If you visit the Radio 4 site, you'll find the old brand. The new R4 brand is relegated to the new media output of the station, which is unlikely to be accessed by the core 'Surrey' audience.

Being 20 Means Work, Work and More Work!
Aside from preparing for and clearing up after a dinner party, I have pretty much spent the rest of the week revising for an Italian assessment that I had today. I'm not sure that I did all that well, but I really don't know what standard was expected of me, so I'll have to wait until next week to see if I passed.
Pass the Spanner
It seems fairly obvious that there are two reasons that we are having these questions. Firstly, we have no single written document stating how we shall be ruled, and secondly, as humans, we have a desire for the new and the modern. I have to say that I quite like the idea of the UK being one of only two states in the world to have an unwritten constitution. It is reflective of the fairly unique status of Britain as being a country that has tried on most forms of government at one time or another: absolute monarchy, republic, colony, imperial power and so on, but has finally settled on one without the need for a major modern revolution. But by slowly adopting and adapting, we have caused some little problems here and there in the make up of the state. Read More...
I am a Thief!
I really don't understand why one incorrect entry caused by a slightly jammed keypad should be cause for a block to be put on my account, but that is what seems to happen.
It would of course have to happen on the same day that my bike got a flat tyre just as I was leaving for uni, that I was late for my first lecture, and that I had forgotten to do the reading for my modern politics class, but I suppose that it is good to get all the bad things concentrated into one day so that they are over and done with!
Settling In
When I first moved to Manchester for the first year of my course at Uni, I spent the first few weeks just settling in and trying to get used to the whole idea of living away from home and being in a city and country with a quite different culture from that which I grew up with. This past week, I have been sort of doing that again. I just started back at Uni for the second year of my course, and its quite strange how all the totally new experiences are mixing with lots of familiar stuff.
I have to find a launderette and work out how to
use storage heaters and an Economy 7 water heater,
but I know my way around campus and can find most of
my lecture theaters without getting lost. It helps
that I have a decent place to live this year. Last
year, I was in a really bad hall of residence in
Hulme, sharing a flat with people who I didn't really
get along with. This year, I have a comfortable flat
in Didsbury which, thanks to their cheap furniture,
almost resembles a page out of an Ikea catalogue. I'm
still getting the hang of things, but I feel a lot
more settled than I did last year.
The Greens are Gathering!
Every year, 20,000 or so hippies congregate on top of the Mendip Hills in Somerset. It is called the Big Green Gathering. I just got back from this year's Gathering, so I thought I would do a joint blog and photo posting.
The idea of the festival is to let people learn about green lifestyles, and swap ideas or bring important things to peoples attention. There's also a lot of great music. One of the best experiences the festival offers is just to be able to know that you are not alone in caring about the environment. And with twenty thousand people in just a few fields, you pretty quickly get to see the full green spectrum! Among stall-holders this year were "Hunt Saboteurs", the Simultaneous Policy people, and the Squatters Rights group who, rather amusingly, put up posters for a forum titled "Beyond Squatting" on the doors to every portaloo on site!
I have to mention the Simultaneous Policy people because their idea is just so unusual that I was surprised to see them back at this years festival. The gist of the idea is that nation-states can make decisions that could affect matters such as trade and investment more easily if they all make the decision at the same time. It removes the disadvantage in being an early adopter and possibly losing the trade or investment to another state which has not implemented the idea. To be perfectly honest, while it may sound like a good idea, I think that it is just really incredibly idealistic and naive to think that this could ever work in the current international community. Anyway, they seem like nice people with good intentions.
One of the musical highlights of the festival was
Martha Tilston's performance. I don't think that she
is particularly well known outside the realm of folk
music, but she is an absolutely amazing artist.
Because most of the audience got to the venue before
she probably even left her tent, she had to tune
instruments and warm up in front of everyone, but I
think that just added to the experience. At the end,
she managed to sneak off stage and out of the tent,
leaving everyone in the audience still singing her
last song!
I Have Entered Politics, I Can Say Untruths With A Straight Face!
It is official. I have entered politics! With my first letter to the Edinburgh Evening News, I have sparked two people on the EEN web forum to strongly disagree with me and call me a "career-driven supporter" of the SGP, speaking "no more than blatant propaganda"! Here are the posts in full:
#12(#10 Climate Truth) - Wow! It is good to hear from someone who can speak knowledgeably about these issues that have been reduced to no more than blatant propaganda by the Greens and too many career-driven supporters. Climate Truth's comment refers to the latest IPCC report allegedly supported by "2,500 scientists" and to the "Summary for Policy Makers" which has been released in advance of the report proper. If I understand correctly, this Summary was issued before the report proper was finalised. However, it was announced that the report would not be changed except to bring it into line with the Summary - completely the wrong way round! The summary should be of the findings of the Report! It is not only Tom Redford who says such untruths with a straight face - Greens as a group are lying their way through the Press. A couple of days ago we had another who stated as fact something that was just not true, not misinterpreted, not misunderstood but just not true. And these people have the gall to suggest we vote for them!
#14Yes (12), I too dislike this propaganda that the Greens are using to present their argument. It implies that they have a very weak case so have to use the "big lie" to make their argument. Tom Redford says that Helen Martin "writes that the scientific community is divided on the matter of whether climate change is caused by human activities. This is simply not true." That statement is simply not true, as Climate Truth says with significant references to dissenting scientists. At least Steuart Campbell, whilst supporting TOm [sic] Redford's view, is honest enough to admit the reality - that pursuing the Greens' policy would wreck the economy, a significant factor in my view. I had the privilege to attend the lecture given some months ago by Bjorn Lomborg, who left Greenpeace at the same time as one of the co-founders. They took the view that the argument had been won, that people were correctly concerned about ecology and it was no longer necessary to pursue confrontation to make their case. Too many Greenpeace activists enjoyed confrontation to follow their lead, leading to that schism. Lomborg argues that whilst everyone should be concerned about the planet, Kyoto required far more investment than the improvements that it could create. It couldn't produce a realistic return on the investment, both in activity and financial cost. He even wrote a book about all the other steps that could be taken instead with far greater benefit to the planet and its inhabitants. He has been described as one of the 100 most influential people in the world. He also disagrees with the IPCC "findings".
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