Saturday, 25 July 2009

Norwich North; Result


There was no real surprise in the Conservative candidate Chloe Smith winning the Norwich North by-election on Thursday. It was indeed expected that the Conservatives would win, you would have been a brave man to bet against that. A swing towards the Torys of over 16% may seem impressive, however their vote count actually went down by over 2000 when compared with the 2005 election. Obviously this being due to the low turn out of 45%.

The Greens only managed a disappointing 5th place, but percentage wise, on 9.7% it was their best result ever. The real surprise was UKIP coming 4th with almost 12%, up over 9%. I hate to repeat myself but this result really shows the need for electoral reform; 60% of the votes were not for the Conservative candidate, meaning that the majority of the electorate do not want a Conservative MP. Yet this corrupt winner takes all systems mean they are stuck with one now.

Could this be a sign of a Tory landslide in the next election?

Well all I can say is I seriously hope not. For the sake of the British working class. A victory for the Conservatives would be a step back into the dark days of Thatcherism. And as George Galloway put it on Question Time; "For the Conservatives to be talking about Social Mobility really is a complete joke, the Conservative front bench is full to the brim of old Etonians".

Thursday, 23 July 2009

Norwich North


The polls have been opened for the Norwich North by-election today, making it the first parliamentary election since the "expenses crisis" broke. Ian Gibson, of Labour, the current MP for the constituency was barred from standing again as a Labour candidate after details emerged of how he claimed expenses for a flat in London that his daughter lived in, then in protest at "doing nothing wrong" he stepped down with immediate effect.

What's going to happen then in the election?

Firstly what happened in the last election in 2005?

General Election 2005: Norwich North
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourIan Gibson21,09744.9−2.5
ConservativeJames Tumbridge15,63833.2−1.4
Liberal DemocratRobin Whitmore7,61616.2+1.4
GreenAdrian Holmes1,2522.7+1.0
UK IndependenceJohn Youles1,1222.4+1.4
IndependentBill Holden3080.7N/A
Majority5,45911.6
Turnout47,03361.1+2.0
Labour hold
Swing−0.6

A clear win for Mr. Gibson. Conservatives a far second, Liberals a distant third, Greens and UKIP not really making an impact, and the usual Independent which a few hundred votes.

So what's going to happen this time?

Well it seems almost certain that Labour aren't going to win. With national approve of Gordon Brown and his chums at seriously low levels combined with the association of Mr. Gibson and his eager claiming, it can be almost guaranteed that Labour will lose masses of it's vote.

So where's the Labour vote going to go?

We'll really just have to wait and see, but I predict that some of it will pass to the Greens, some to the Liberals and a minor part to the BNP who are fielding a candidate in this constituency for the first time.

Could this be a breakthrough for the Green party, given the current anti-politics mood?

Unlikely given that they are still seen upon as a minor party and the first past the post system crippling smaller parties. But I wouldn't be surprised if they came a close third or even second. It is worth pointing out that in local Norwich councils the Greens have a large number of councillors, and that the Greens came first in several small districts in the EU elections in and around Norwich. So unfortunately it seems this will not be the breakthrough the Greens have been hoping for, but perhaps, and I secretly hope, I will be proved wrong.

It is also the first time the ultra-capitalist Libertarian party have fielded a candidate for a parliamentary seat. Little have they noticed the huge economic crisis that has played out due to the exact policy they preach; privatisation. It will be interesting to see just how spectacularly they lose.

Of course given the first past the post system, "democracy" doesn't come into the equation at all. Until a fairer system of proportional representation is implemented this severe lack of democracy shall continue.

With results due out in a few hours now, I for one, can't wait.



Tuesday, 21 July 2009

Moon Landing


40 years ago yesterday, or to be precise it was 9.18pm, July 20th, 1969, Man achieved the most amazing feat. The greatest scientific breakthrough in all history. It was of course the first human being to set foot upon the Moon. We all know his name, it was Neil Armstrong. While this has completely nothing to do with politics nor class struggle it is something we must celebrate. So here are just a few pictures that show just how incredible that achievement was.


'
Mr Armstrong takes the first ever step on the moon.


''/
The famous "Earth Rise"


'Image
Footprint on the Moon


More Pictures by the BBC here


Tuesday, 14 July 2009

I am a Communist


The Communist Party of the USA recently added a new, what I guess you would call advert, for their party. It was recorded at a Marxist gathering they held at their headquarters in New York a few weeks back. Somewhat surprisingly I was seriously impressed. Check it out, oh and watch out for Nightcrowred's star part;


I am a Communist.

Saturday, 11 July 2009

To Burqa or not to Burqa?


'Image

The Burqa, "modeled" above, seems to be making the news again. Recently President Sarkozy called for the Burqa to be banned in France, saying it was "not welcome". But what is the Burqa? Why do some Muslim women feel they should wear it? and is it really Islamic?

To answer these questions I'm going to reproduce a piece in the Independent, by the regular journalist Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, who happens to be a female Muslim;
I am a Shia Muslim and I abhor the burqa. I am offended by the unchallenged presumption that women covering their heads and bodies and now faces are more pious and true than am I.

Islam in all its diverse forms entitles believers to a personal relationship with Allah – it cuts out middlemen, one reason its appeal extended to so many across the world. You can seek advice from learned scholars and imams, but they cannot come between your faith and the light of God. Today control freaks who claim they have a special line to the Almighty have turned our world dark. Neo-conservative Islamic codes spread like swine flu, an infection few seem able to resist.

The disease is progressive. It started 20 years ago with the hijab, donned then as a defiant symbol of identity, now a conscript's uniform. Then came the jilbab, the cloak, fought over in courts when schoolgirls were manipulated into claiming it as an essential Islamic garment. If so, hell awaits the female leaders of Pakistan and Bangladesh.

Soon, children as young as four were kitted up in cloaks and headscarves ("so they get used to it, and then later wear the full thing," said a teacher to me who works at a Muslim girls' school) and now for the graduation gown, a full burqa, preferably with dark glasses.

White liberals frame this sinister development in terms of free choice and tolerance. Some write letters to this paper: What is the problem? It is all part of the rich diversity of our nation. They can rise to this challenge, show they are superhuman when it comes to liberty and forbearance.

They might not be quite so sanguine if their own daughters decided to be fully veiled or their sons became fanatic Islamicists and imposed purdah in the family. Such converts are springing up in Muslim families all over the land. Veils predate Islam and were never an injunction (modesty of attire for men and women is). Cultural protectionism has long been extended to those who came from old colonies, in part to atone for imperial hauteur. Redress was necessary then, not now.

What about legitimate fears that to criticise vulnerable ethnic and racial groups validates the racism they face? Racism is an evil but should never be used as an alibi to acquit oppressions within black and Asian or religious communities. That cry was used to deter us from exposing forced marriages and dowry deaths and black-upon-black violence.

Right-wing think tanks and President Sarkozy of France scapegoat Muslims for political gain and British fascists have turned self-inflicted "ethnic" wounds into scarlet propaganda. They do what they always have done. Self-censorship will not stop them but it does stop us from dealing with home-grown problems or articulating objections to reactionary life choices like the burqa. Muslim women who show their hair are becoming an endangered species. We must fight back. Our covered-up sisters do not understand history, politics, struggles, their faith or equality. As Rahila Gupta, campaigner against domestic violence, writes: "This is a cloth that comes soaked in blood. We cannot debate the burqa or the hijab without reference to women in Iran, Afghanistan or Saudi Arabia where the wearing of it are heavily policed and any slippages are met with violence." What happened to solidarity?

Violent enforcement is evident in Britain too. A fully veiled young chemistry graduate once came to my home, her body covered in cuts, tears, bites, bruises, all happily hidden from view. Security and social cohesion are all threatened by this trend – which is growing exponentially.

As for the pathetic excuse that covering up protects women from male lasciviousness – it hasn't stopped rapists in the most conservative Muslim nations. And what a slur on decent Muslim men, portrayed as sexual predators who cannot look upon a woman without wanting her.

We communicate with each other with our faces. To deny that interaction is to deny our shared humanity. Unreasonable community or nationalistic expectations disconnect essential bonds. Governments should not accommodate such demands. Naturists can't parade on the streets, go to school or take up jobs unless they cover their nakedness. Why should burqaed women get special consideration?

Their veils are walls, keeping them in and us out. We need an urgent, open conversation on this issue – which divides the Muslim intelligensia as much as the nation. Our social environment, fragile and precious, matters more than choice and custom should to British Muslims. If we don't compromise for the greater good, the future looks only more bitter and bleak. Saying so doesn't make me the enemy of my people.

We on the left must do all the can to end anti-Muslim discrimination around the world, but in doing that we must not lend our support to Islamists. The enemy of our enemy is not, and never will be, our friend.

Thursday, 9 July 2009

Iranian Revolution? Part 2


A few weeks ago now, I began to analysis the electoral crisis in Iran. I apologise for the delay in releasing the second part. In trying to understand the recent mass protest against the "re-election" of Ahmadinejad I felt it necessary to put everything into it's correct context by looking in more depth at the last 50 years or so of Iranian history. While events may no longer be in the mainstream news, it would be foolish to assume now that everything is okay.

Last time, I discovered how British and American interventionism in Iran during the 1950s when Mohammed Mossaddeq, and his threat of Oil nationalisation, was removed in a coup and the Shah, or King, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi was put in his place.

The Shah

The longer the Shah remained in power, the more authoritarian he became, indeed many of his behaviours violated the 1906 Iran Constitution. The Communist party at the time, the Tudeh Party of Iran, was shutdown and forced underground by the state. Political activists from the whole spectrum were arrested or spied on. Speaking against the Shah became a crime. The Shah created a cult of personality for himself. Pictures of him where everywhere throughout Iran, including massive posters on the streets and honorific pictures were shown before movies at the cinema. If anything, the Shah became a Stalinist dictator. But while the US was bitterly locked in the Cold War with the USSR and it's allies, it was all to happy to support and prop up the Shah's dictatorial regime. This such hypocritical behaviour did not escape the Iranian people.

In 1963, the Shah introduced, well at least tried to introduce, a series of political and economic reforms aimed at improving the life's of the Iranian people, namely the White Revolution. This included 19 "elements", among them; allowing Women to "vote", ending feudal practices, increasing public health care, combating illiteracy and so on. While these reforms appeared to be such positive moves to us, they were severely criticised by the elitist Conservative Islamist religious clergy. This band of clergy was led by Ruhollah Musavi Khomeini. Such was the opposition to said reforms that it led to mass protests, which due to the oppressive regime of the Shah quickly led to the deaths of many student protesters who were shot by armed police and military. Speaking at a protest on the 22nd of March 1963 Khomeini showed his opinion to Jews and Christians by saying;
I have repeatedly pointed out that the government has evil intentions and is opposed to the ordinances of Islam. ... The Ministry of Justice has made clear its opposition to the ordinances of Islam by various measures like the abolition of the requirement that judges be Muslim and male; henceforth, Jews, Christians, and the enemies of Islam and the Muslims are to decide on affairs concerning the honor and person of the Muslims.
And later he in June of that year he showed more Antisemitism by asking at a protest if the Shah was a "infidel Jew". Khomeini then went into exile in November of 1964.



In 1971 the Shah, pictured above, left, was invited to the US to meet and greet with then US President Richard Nixon, above middle. Further angering the oppressed Iranian people.

The Shah celebrated 2500 years of Iranian monarchy in October of 1971. It was reported to have cost hundreds of millions of dollars, all while millions of Iran people were still living in poverty. Dozens of western and indeed non-western, leaders attend the celebrations.

In 1975, the Shah abolished completely a multi-party "democracy" and created his one party rule under the newly formed Rastakhiz Party. Democracy had slowly been eroded since '53 and now had completely gone. A Persian volcano of anger was building up in the Iranian people, the coming explosion was inevitable.

To be continued....

Wednesday, 8 July 2009

We Don't Want Them - New Lowkey Single


You may remember a few months ago, I blogged on British rapper Lowkey, and his charity single "Tears to Laughter/ Long Live Palestine". Well, Lowkey is back again. This time with a new single, titled, We Don't Want Them, which has been made in partnership with the anti-Racist and anti-BNP campaign group Love Music Hate Racism. Yet again, profits will not be made on the track, with all money raised going to Love Music Hate Racism. As expected that song has hard hitting and brilliant lyrics which convey such anger and emotion at the rise of racism in the UK. So I encourage all the buy this new track, because as well as getting an amazing piece of music for your money you will be helping the effort to help stamp out the ugly face of racism in modern Britain.

Single cover;



Info from the official Love Music Hate Racism website;
A number of artists have already reacted to the election of the fascist BNP to the European Parliament in song - but LowKey is the first to release a new song specially written in response the Nazis’ election win. As well as being a brilliant track with sentiments every anti-fascist can chant along to, “We Don’t Want Them” is released via iTunes today with every penny of the profits going to LMHR - that’s almost 50p for the cause from everyone who buys it - so what are you waiting for. We need your support to build an even bigger campaign against racism and fascism

The brand new single We Don’t Want Them by British Hip Hop artist Lowkey and produced by The Last Skeptik. The track is being released in association with Love Music Hate Racism as a response to the fascist British National Party and their recent growth in the face of the recession with Lowkey donating all profits from the single to LMHR.Lowkey is a Poet, Playwright, Political Activist and award winning Hip Hop Artist who has received airplay on numerous major radio stations including BBC Radio 1, Capital FM, Kiss FM, Choice FM and BBC 1Xtra and this year alone has toured internationally performing to crowds everywhere from Glastonbury and Trafalgar Square to Palestine, Israel, New York and Austria.


I wish that there was a video accompanying the single so that I could give readers a chance to hear the song before you part with your money. However at this time that seems impossible, so if you are determined to hear a sample then I shall suggest the 30 second sample on the Itunes store.

"We Don't Want Them" is available on Itunes and on Play.com now.

... and if you are still unconvinced check out this review on a UK Hip Hop blog


On a closing note, I wanted to add that I am working on the much belated part 2 to my Iranian election crisis analysis, which should be up in the next few days. So check back when you can.

Sunday, 5 July 2009

Michael Jackson

Micheal Jackson (29/7/1958 - 25/6/2009), although a man sparked with controversy, was undeniably a huge global superstar and probably this biggest celebrity of this generation. While that by it's self is not really something to celebrate, what should be celebrated is the charitable work which the King of Pop devoted himself to throughout his life and the political and environmental messages in several of his songs, including Earth Song, Man in the Mirror, We Are the World and Heal the World.

Michael even set up his own charity, named Heal the World Foundation, after the song of the same name.

So for that reason here is the powerful and emotional video to Earth Song with the lyrics underneath. Enjoy. RIP Michael, you will be missed.



What about sunrise
What about rain
What about all the things
That you said we were to gain.. .
What about killing fields
Is there a time
What about all the things
That you said was yours and mine...
Did you ever stop to notice
All the blood we've shed before
Did you ever stop to notice
The crying Earth the weeping shores?

What have we done to the world
Look what we've done
What about all the peace
That you pledge your only son...
What about flowering fields
Is there a time
What about all the dreams
That you said was yours and mine...
Did you ever stop to notice
All the children dead from war
Did you ever stop to notice
The crying Earth the weeping shores

I used to dream
I used to glance beyond the stars
Now I don't know where we are
Although I know we've drifted far

Hey, what about yesterday
(What about us)
What about the seas
(What about us)
The heavens are falling down
(What about us)
I can't even breathe
(What about us)
What about the bleeding Earth
(What about us)
Can't we feel its wounds
(What about us)
What about nature's worth
(ooo,ooo)
It's our planet's womb
(What about us)
What about animals
(What about it)
We've turned kingdoms to dust
(What about us)
What about elephants
(What about us)
Have we lost their trust
(What about us)
What about crying whales
(What about us)
We're ravaging the seas
(What about us)
What about forest trails
(ooo, ooo)
Burnt despite our pleas
(What about us)
What about the holy land
(What about it)
Torn apart by creed
(What about us)
What about the common man
(What about us)
Can't we set him free
(What about us)
What about children dying
(What about us)
Can't you hear them cry
(What about us)
Where did we go wrong
(ooo, ooo)
Someone tell me why
(What about us)
What about babies
(What about it)
What about the days
(What about us)
What about all their joy
(What about us)
What about the man
(What about us)
What about the crying man
(What about us)
What about Abraham
(What was us)
What about death again
(ooo, ooo)
Do we give a damn

Saturday, 4 July 2009

Apologies


You may have noticed I have been absent from blogging for a while. I can only apologise. My Laptop broke (indeed, only after I dropped a beer bottle on it). Now finally I have a new one. So without further ado let's get back to business.

A good friend of mine, Mr "Nightcrowred", managed to bag an interview with Sam Webb, leader of the Communist Party of the United States of America, (CPUSA). While I myself have issues with the CPUSA I felt that this interview went very well and that Mr Webb gave some brilliant answers to some difficult questions. The questions themselves were mainly suggested by viewers of Nightcrowred's youtube channel, something which I congratulate as an ingenious idea. Even I left a few questions which I would have liked to be raised, and indeed was very thankful when they were. So here, in five separate parts it is;




(My questions are in this part)

And finally Part 5

Sunday, 21 June 2009

Iranian Revolution? Part 1


A protester. From Al Jazeera

Iran. A nation with thousands of years of rich history. But, this week, it has become a nation of rioting, protests and murder. Democracy, human rights and self respect, or at least what such little there once was, have gone out the win
dow. After Mahmoud Ahmadinejad "won" the June 12th election, to the reaction of mass protest, could we be seeing a second Iranian Revolution, almost exactly 30 years after the first, or will this be a Persian Tiananmen square?

Before we can attempt to understand why the current situation has occurred we need to understand modern Iranian history. To just observe the present situation and determine it's causes, effects and possible outcome is impossible. Such a familiar story is uncovered that it appears merely an echo from around the world. This is my simplified take on such a complex series of events. Names and key events are linked with more information;

In 1951 Mohammad Mosaddeq was democratically elected the Prime Minister of Iran. He won on a campaign to nationalise the vast oil production and to remove the intervention of foreign powers in Iran.

Mohammed Mossaddeq, Prime Minister of Iran from 1951 to 1953.


But, as always, there was a problem with that. At the time the Oil was owned by the British oil giant BP. They raked in billions of pounds profit each year selling Iranian oil. They weren't happy. This became known as the Abadan Crisis, named after the city where the oil refinery was located. Now because capital for UK business is, and always will be in a capitalist mode of production, more important than both Iranian democracy and human rights the then UK Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, enlisted the help of the US to remove Mossadeq from power. Harry S. Truman, the US president at the time refused. But then in 1953, Dwight D. Eisenhower replaced Truman and agreed to overthrow Mossaddeq. Winston Churchill, the very man who led the defeat of Nazism was now plotting to remove the elected Prime Minister of Iran. Oh, the irony.

So the coup began. The CIA and MI6 moved in arrested Mossaddeq and set the Shah, or monarch, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, complete political power. The oil fell back into the hands of BP and other foreign companies. Everyone was happy again; the money was rolling in, Iran was under control of a US puppet government, there was no danger of Soviet influence. In a word -perfect. Except, of course for the people of Iran. The person they had chosen to be their leader and use oil revenues to improve the impoverished nation had been removed. To make matters worse they now had to live under the brutal dictatorship of the Shah, who, just to rub things in, was supported and funded by the western world.

To be continued....