Monthly Archives: April 2006

Environmental politics

Time to stop sending catalogues?

I read today about a neat protest against Victoria’s Secret, which mails 395 million catalogs annually [in the US], most printed on virgin paper. The protesters want it to use recycled paper – a start, but not, I’d suggest enough. Why, in the multimedia age, do we still need to not only print on paper, but then ship that vast weight around countries (and even across the world) – consuming lots of fossil fuel in the process?

I recently rang up Land’s End, a particularly egregarious offender in sending vast numbers of catalogues, sometimes it seems at weekly intervals, and asked them to stop. “Don’t you like us any more?” was the line of questioning. “No,” I said, “if I decided I need any more white T-shirts or similar, I will look on the website.”

Surely it is time for companies to at least provide the option of not getting catalogues? By all means send me a regular email with special offers etc, or reminding me to visit your website – I think the environment can bear the electrons – but don’t use 20th-century methods of promotion; you’ll only annoy me.

Miscellaneous

Welcome to Philobiblon

This will soon be the new home of my blog. In the meantime you can find it here

Lady of Quality

A most amiable king

My 19th-century blogger Miss Frances Williams Wynn is today indulging in a good old gossip about French royalty – particularly the Duke of Orleans, Louis Phillipe, later the the last French king.

I found that Sir Coutts, like myself, believed what they said to be true, that Louis Philippe had not sought the painful pre-eminence in which he finds himself.

Her informant is one Sir Coutts Trotter. As his name suggests he was involved with the famous bank (being principal partner and it seems from this reference very much a working one) – making his dinner with Miss Williams Wynn an interesting example of “trade” and aristocracy intermixing. (OK, I suppose it was a superior form of “trade”.) I also found a detailed account of his burial place (in Hendon).

Environmental politics Politics

The other London

One reason why I enjoy canvassing is the glimpses it provides into the many styles of London life. Some of the glimpses are, however, almost unbearably sad.

One group that arouses such emotion are the South Asian women who meet you at the door with a look very close to terror in their eyes. It is, I think, a varying mix of a fear of encountering a world that is strange and foreign, and that they’ve probably been warned against, fear that their behaviour will be judged inappropriate by husband or mother-in-law, fear that their lack of English skills and other “life skills” will be exposed.

I thought of them when I read the story of a Bangladeshi woman treated with great sense by a judge, who gave her a suspended jail term.

Rahella Khanom, 24, caused the five-month-old boy in her care to suffer fractures to his breast bone and ribs as she tried to rid him of evil spirits, Southwark Crown Court was told.

The story reveals how, despite living in London for years, she was effectively still kept in a Bangladeshi village:

The judge said that Khanom’s strong cultural and religious beliefs, and the fact that she had been forced by her husband to live in isolation since coming to Britain from Bangladesh, meant that there were exceptional circumstances in her case.

So sad, so sad for the child, who suffered brain damage, and so sad for any children she might have, who will have a parent unable to be any sort of support in their world, and, of course, so sad for her, able to develop to only a tiny fraction of her human potential.

Politics

Small but revealing

Sometimes it is the small(er) things that really reveal the fundamental nature and mindset of regimes. In America, the Bush government is reclassifying as “secret” material already placed in the National Archive:

Documents have been disappearing since 1999 because intelligence officials have wanted them to. And under the terms of two disturbing agreements — with the C.I.A. and the Air Force — the National Archives has been allowing officials to reclassify declassified documents, which means removing them from the public eye. So far 55,000 pages, some of them from the 1950’s, have vanished. This not only violates the mission of the National Archives; it is also antithetical to the natural flow of information in an open society.

An open, democratic society? That’s the last thing that Bush and his controllers want. Might result in resistence to the latest foreign adventure or environmental destruction.

In Britain – and this is a “little thing” only in that a relatively small number of people are likely to be affected – the Blair government is planning to both drastically cut payments to people wrongfully convicted of crime, but to entirely abolish a millennia-old principle, “innocent until proven guilty”.

Mr Clarke acknowledged that a move to a “not proven” verdict would be a major change. “It would be a radical change. We are going to have a look at it. The time has come to assess it,” he said.

Behind this is an anti-liberty, very Daily Mail rightwing attitude that we are the respectable middle classes and they – anyone in the dock – must be the dangerous other. And if they happen to be found not guilty – by a jury of their peers – it must have been a mistake, for the instruments of state authority are always right.

But sometimes the little things also demonstrate individual creativity and initiative. Sussex ambulance service has created a series of first aid instructions for MP3 players.

The project was the idea of a paramedic, Stuart Rutland, who said that he hoped it might help in an emergency. “I like to go running and listen to music – but what if I turned the corner and somebody had collapsed? I have 11 years of paramedic training, but not everyone will. It’s just about what to do in those moments before an ambulance arrives.

Blogging/IT

The power (and democracy) of the blog

From the Guardian:

Bloggers and internet pundits are exerting a “disproportionately large influence” on society, according to a report by a technology research company. Its study suggests that although “active” web users make up only a small proportion of Europe’s online population, they are increasingly dominating public conversations and creating business trends.

The article goes on to say that half of European web-users are “passive”, not contributing to content at all, while a quarter only respond when prompted. But of course if you turn those figures around the other way, it means one-quarter of web-users are now actively contributing to the media, and thus, the article argues, exercising an influence on society – which compares to the old days or old media, when a tiny fraction of a percentage point were contributing. That’s a pretty substantial democratic leap.

A nice companion piece to this: an interview with Cory Doctorow of Boing Boing, with a short list of its “coups”.