Monthly Archives: June 2007

Politics

What’s possible…

…housing was easily the top issue throughout the 1945 Parliament and at the 1950 general election. A quarter of Britain’s dwellings did not have their own lavatory, nearly half lacked a fixed bath. The shortage of homes was estimated at somewhere between 700,000 and double that figure. In Glasgow, nearly half the population were thought to need rehousing. And the progress made under Labour was impressive. By 1951, a million new homes had been built, four-fifths of them for local authorities. When Harold Macmillan went on to set and meet a target of 300,000 homes a year, the majority too were council-owned. The trend continued under later Tory and Labour administrations, so that by the 1970s a third of the total housing stock was owned by the council.

From a TLS review of Austerity Britain.

Blogging/IT

It’s an online world…

And it is changing fast:

* China is about to overtake the US in the total number of broadband connections (now 60 million to 56 million), and there are now about 300m people worldwide on fast connections. (And a lot of countries, of course, being left behind.)

* The Economist is putting ALL of its content free online from this week. (And I got an email addressing me as “a noted online commentator on environmental issues” suggesting I join a debate on air travel, which shows they are really working the internet, “viral”, marketing.)

* And you mightn’t have to turn your head sideways and squint a bit in an attempt to identify the letters in Captcha security – you can look at fluffy animals instead. (Since computers can’t distinguish between pictures of cats and dogs….)

Environmental politics

Greens in government in these isles…

OK, it is in Ireland, but it is a very interesting model.

It looks like they have got a lot of excellent environmental stuff:

The programme of government agreed between the parties involves slashing domestic electricity use, expanding renewable energy sources and reopening railway lines to discourage car usage. Specific commitments given to the Greens by Mr Ahern include a climate change commission, reducing Irish greenhouse gas emissions by 3% a year, generating a third of electricity from renewable sources by 2020 and installing “smart electronic meters” in every home to reduce consumption.

And the leader of the Greens, Trevor Sargent, is standing down, since he pledged before the election not to form such a coalition. But he still said: “It is the proudest day in my life.”

An interesting model of Green leadership – politicians who live up to their promises.

Carnival of Feminists

Carnival of Feminists No 39

I can only apologise – I don’t know where the first half of June has gone really, but the Carnival of Feminists has been up on Laurelin in the Rain for a week now and I haven’t pointed you over to it. All I can really do is point you there now, and I’m particularly taken by its international aspects – Kenya, Iraq and more.

So don’t waste time over here – do go over there and check it out. (If of course you haven’t done so already and are wondering how I’ve been so off the ball!)

Blogging/IT

Fallen into the Facebook crowd

Don’t quite know how it happened – an accident really, and still not quite sure what I’ll actually do with it, but you’ll find me over there…

History

What do we write down?

Currently reading Farming in the First Millennium AD: British Agriculture between Julius Caesar and William the Conqueror. And more can be known than you think. But the author, Peter Fowler, got an interesting thought about the historical record:

No one recorded how villages developed; no one, to judge from the silence, decided that an open field system would be better for some parts of Britain and not for most of the rest of Britain. TO be fair, neither documents nor archaeology are good at recording such developments for any period, however important they may be interms of longer-term significance, e.g. no government statement or official document recorded when the people of Britain became a ‘post-modernist society’. The evidence is not, therefore, just being awkward for the first millennium AD.”