Friday, 30 May 2008

Lines of Communication

It is incredible, in this era of 24-hour news coverage, that places like Guantánamo Bay and the goings-on there are not reported in the newspapers every single day. Instead, we hear stories like this in the Guardian:

"A British resident facing the death penalty at Guantánamo Bay has made a desperate plea for Gordon Brown to end his six-year ordeal and bring him home.


Binyam Mohammed, the only remaining Guantánamo inmate with the automatic right to British residency, has written to the prime minister pleading with him to use his influence with the US president, George Bush, to stop a US military court sending him to his death."

Although this story made the front page of the Independent, according to Politics Home there are precisely no column inches dedicated to this story in the Times, Daily Telegraph, Guardian (although only on their website) and the Daily Mail. No other tabloid saw fit to cover this story. Instead, the front page of the Sun website at the moment says that Naomi Campbell may face jail. Strewth.

I wonder if Gordon Brown will send Binyam a personal phone call, like he has to some of the other people who write to him:

"Dark days call for direct measures, which perhaps explains why Gordon Brown has taken to cold-calling members of the public who write him letters of complaint.


Although the majority of queries and complaints written to the prime minister get a polite, generic letter in reply, as many as two dozen people a week get a personal telephone call from Brown, according to sources close to Downing Street."

I doubt it somehow.

It's nice to end posts on a cheerful note, so here is an anecdote (which may or may not be true) from the latter article which I enjoyed:

"The prime minister apparently made one of his first calls at what was for him the start of his working day. 'Brown made a phone call at 6am, without thinking,' a Labour source told PR Week. 'Luckily the person he called was a shift worker, so he was awake.'"

Cory

Posted by The golden strawberry at 13:37:00 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Reasons to be Cheerful

Expect to see headlines like "Labour: Gordon Brown support slumps to its lowest since polling began" in newspapers often over the next few months. Political news could well become like the weather reports that say this is "the hottest February since records began", or whatever.

Still, there is a crumb of comfort in the article:

"It is the lowest level of support for Labour since pollsters Gallup first asked people to declare their voting intention in 1943, a few months before the Battle of El Alamein."

Two years later, in 1945, Labour won a landslide. We can dream, can't we?

Cory
Posted by The golden strawberry at 10:57:52 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Wednesday, 28 May 2008

I'm back!

Once again, I have returned from my self-imposed exile. I have finished exams, huzzah!

I return with encouraging news - there is something more incompetent than the Labour government. It doesn't appear to be of this world though:

"The crew of the international space station have been left with almost nowhere to go - because their only toilet is broken."

Hmmm....

Cory
Posted by The golden strawberry at 20:45:43 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Monday, 12 May 2008

Intermission

I have exams coming up and internet problems from home. Posting may therefore be a bit sporadic in the next couple of weeks. I'll be back though...honest...

Cory
Posted by The golden strawberry at 21:18:33 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Wednesday, 07 May 2008

Yet another reason why people should study history

The protests surrounding China hosting the Olympic games and the Olympic torch have been a "good thing" - they have at least increased awareness of China's appalling human rights record.

Still, it does help to know a bit of history, as without it we are unaware of our place in, well, humanity. Take this photo from a pro-Tibet/anti-China rally in the US:

 



For those who don't quite grasp the irony, you might want to have a look at Wikipedia's entry for the 1936 Summer Olympic Games. There are many good reasons why China shouldn't be hosting the Olympics (which doesn't mean they should be boycotted) but that isn't one of them.

Cory

Via The Drink Soaked Trots

Posted by The golden strawberry at 11:00:02 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

An exercise in self-delusion

Whilst working late yesterday, I was watching BBC News 24's coverage of the primary elections. There was footage of Hillary Clinton shaking hands with her supporters, and smiling that far-too-fake smile; the one that looks as though she's a guppy fish that's just been told that it's won the lottery.

The reporter said something to the effect of, "Hillary Clinton looks very upbeat here. Maybe she thinks she can still win this nomination".

Of course she does. Despite the fact that the numbers are against her. Anyone who thinks they can be named after Sir Edmund Hillary despite being born six years before anyone had heard of him, or who says she was shot at by snipers in Bosnia when she was actually greeted by small children is obviously self-delusioned. Despite it being virtually impossible for her to win the popular vote for the nomination, Hillary still obviously believes she can win. And it doesn't matter if she drags her party down with her.

Cory
Posted by The golden strawberry at 10:59:52 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |