A repost
Found via Chicken Yoghurt :
Dear All,
We are writing to you to ask for your help and support. We may have previously contacted you concerning a little boy – child M and his family. We have worrying reasons to believe that they may be facing imminent detention.
As you may remember child M and his family are facing deportation to Iran, where it is likely that his mother, sister and brother will be imprisoned and risk the death penalty if they are made to return. The family also spent 52 days in Yarl’s Wood immigration centre over the summer of 2008. This experience affected the whole family detrimentally. Child M suffered from violent nightmares, ringworm and his hair started to fall out.
Child M is back in school but is very clearly traumatised from this experience. He and his family live in a daily state of fear and uncertainty, scared that today will be a day that they will possibly be detained again or deported. Child M is unable to concentrate, or focus on tasks and struggles to maintain peer relationships. At home he still suffers from violent nightmares and worries constantly about his and his family’s future. It is clear to all around child M that there has been a dramatic change in his emotional and social wellbeing.
We want child M and his family to have a safe and secure future in the UK, so we need your support!
There are a few ways that you can help:
Please forward this email to anyone who you think will be supportive of this issue.
In the event of immigration officials attempting to remove the family from their home we need as many people who can get to the Gorton area asap. If you are willing to be on our telephone tree, please reply to info@defend-asylum.org giving your name and number.
We also need letters writing to the home secretary, Jacqui Smith, asking for her to grant the family asylum.
Finally… please make sure you and anyone you know has signed our online petition @
http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/child-m-must-stay.html
We really need your help and appreciate anything you can do to support us!!
Many thanks,
Zoe Cantle and Sarah Mason on behalf of the Child M Must Stay Campaign http://www.childm.org.uk/
Linkblogging for 06/03/09
Home net access is still as infrequent as a decent policy announcement from the Labour Party, but in the meantime here’s a few links, with less comment from me than usual due to typing this at work…
Pillock has a great post on accents - musical, time-based and artistic, with reference to Backbeat and comic covers.
Andrew Rilstone has a review of Philip Norman’s new biography of John Lennon.
Bot’swana Beast has a post on fictional alphabets in comics
A new organisation, The Comic Book Alliance, has formed to fight against restrictions on free speech in British law, as well as promoting the comic industry. This will be sidebar-linked as soon as I have the ability, combining as it does two of my big passions – civil liberties and comics.
And a lot of people have been linking this excellent article by Charlie Brooker, but far fewer have linked this even better response by Millennium Elephant. As always, the Elephant talks sense.
University Challenged
‘Newspapers’ like the Daily Mail and the Express get savaged on a routine basis by bloggers, but almost as bad, because of its perceived respectability, is that once-great newspaper The Times. Over the decades since it was bought up by Rupert Murdoch, a paper that is synonymous with quality the world over has become merely a ventriloquist’s dummy, mouthing whatever its owner thinks will best benefit his business.
In particular, it joins in the regular attacks on the BBC, an institution that ‘media’ figures such as Murdoch can’t stand, and it does it more cleverly than the tabloids, and as such more dangerously. Take this article as an example. There are no actual factual errors in it (with one possible exception to be mentioned later) but the impression given, which can be gauged from the readers’ comments at the bottom, is a wholly misleading one.
For those of you who don’t know, University Challenge is a TV program which has been going for over forty-five years (with a break of a few years in the late 80s/early 90s) in which teams of four people, representing universities or colleges (due to an historical quirk Oxford and Cambridge universities are allowed to submit a team for each of their colleges, of which there are several) answer general knowledge questions (older USians may remember a show called College Bowl, with the same format). These questions tend to be on the hard side – I appeared on the show myself, and remember questions on orbital mechanics coming up, as an example – although the students appearing aren’t *quite* as knowledgeable as they appear (long stretches where no-one answers a question are routinely cut from the show as transmitted). In fact it’s probably the most difficult quiz show on TV, by some considerable margin.
I don’t have a TV myself, so can’t vouch for the next bit, but apparently this year one of the teams from Oxford university – the team that went on to win the competition, in fact – had someone who knew rather a lot of the answers on it. As we are, for the first time in history, living in a time with no wars, no imminent environmental danger, no economic crises and no draconian laws being passed, the fact that someone at one of the two or three best universities in the world, who was appearing on a quiz show for people who know quite a lot of things, knew some of the answers was the biggest news story of the last few weeks. Even more amazingly, this student was a woman in her twenties and, by all accounts, looked like a rather pleasant-looking young woman. As this is clearly the most momentous event in human history (second only to the story that someone who was once on a ‘reality TV’ show has cancer, anyway) it has received a lot of coverage in the newspapers.
(It may even have received so much coverage that the documentary first broadcast as Forty Years of University Challenge and later as Forty-Five Years Of University Challenge may be rebroadcast under some pretext as they occasionally do, in which case those of you in the UK who want to know what I look like can watch out for the bearded one impersonating David Aaronovitch in the reconstructions).
However, after the last episode was broadcast, even more momentous news broke. It turned out that one of the people on the team had actually left the university between the start of the contest and the end! Calumnity! Capostrophe! Catachresisclysm! Surely this was the crime of the millennium? The BBC, who broadcast (but, crucially for what follows, do not produce) the show leapt into action, and ‘stripped them of their title’ (whatever that means in this context, given that you win nothing but the satisfaction of winning on this show).
But now, in a daring act of investigative journalism, the Times has exclusively revealed that this has happened in the past – that some teams have had members leave the university in the middle of the series. Now, as it happens, several of the cases involve people who went on to a different university, which as Jennie points out in a slightly different context here is perfectly within the rules, but at least one is a genuine case of the rules being broken.
Now, look at the comments again, and what do you see? A lot of people saying what the BBC should do, or talking about how the BBC should have done something or other differently. They’re doing this because they got the clear impression that the BBC had something to do with the making of the programme.
They didn’t.
University Challenge is, and always has been, made by Granada TV, a commercial broadcaster, part of the ITV network. It was originally an ITV show, and Bamber Gascoigne, quoted in the article, presented it on ITV for 25 years. The BBC don’t make the programme, and never have. They broadcast it, after it’s produced by the independent company. Now, in the article, they do state that Granada produce the programme, but they mention it once, in passing. On the other hand, the BBC are mentioned four times, in the context of ‘responsibility’ and ‘decisions’, including being the last two words in the article.
So a quiz team tell Granada they’re eligible when they’re not. Then Granada don’t bother to check this. But it’s the BBC, who merely broadcast the finished product, who are at fault – to the extent that anyone’s ‘at fault’ given that no-one would have cared in the slightest (as can be proved by the other examples in the Times article) had a *different* member of the team not been extremely good.
I look forward to next week’s story about how the BBC cause cancer.
(Incidentally, I was planning to write another post today, as well, about Watchmen, but this took *four hours* to post, thanks to TalkTalk’s incredibly crappy ‘broadband’ ‘service’. See Andrew Rilstone’s most recent post – does anyone know of a *good* broadband/phone provider (ie not BT (and see today’s Daily Mash for more on them), TalkTalk or Virgin) in the UK? Don’t expect much from me until TalkTalk manage to get a) my ‘phone line and b) their DNS servers sorted out…)
Linkblogging for 01/03/09
A few links for you:
At Lib Dem Voice they’re wondering if the Fuhrerprinzip is now the basis for governing Britain. For all the fuss being made about the obscene amount of money that Fred Goodwin is getting in his pension, the fact is that it’s his money paid into his pension scheme, and that this is how our current economic system works. If you don’t like the fact that a retired usurer gets more in a year than my wife would get in sixty years working full-time in her job as a nursing assistant (and, as you can imagine, I don’t like that fact one bit) then try to change the system rather than singling out scapegoats.
As some of you may know, scans_daily, a livejournal community based around posting scans of comics, was recently closed for copyright violation after the comic writer Peter David complained. Chris Bird has the best take on this. Speaking of comics, I’ve recently got a sense of ennui about comics – there’s plenty I’m reading that’s pretty good, but nothing that’s grabbing me and insisting I write about it. I’m sure that’ll change when Seaguy 2 comes along, or Morrison’s return to Batman but in the meantime do any of you (Mindless Ones? ) have any suggestions for exciting four-colour adventure with enough in it for me to sink my teeth into writing about? In the meantime, I’ll post some more on Cerebus and some other old ‘art comics’, but the genre stuff is more my forte…
Bloggingthemail here eviscerates a column from Amanda Platell in the Mail saying fat people shouldn’t be treated on the NHS. As a fat person, I think Mail columnists shouldn’t be treated by public *or* private doctors, for the good of the species, but thankfully I do not have a column with several million readers from which to propound this view. Ms Platell, alas, does…
Bryan Hibbs has seen the Watchmen film, and from the review it’s clear that this was *exactly* the film I expected them to make, except that the new ending is even stupider than I thought it would be. Seriously, if you go to see this film, you’re an idiot. It couldn’t possibly be good.
The Mindless Ones present… Teal Kryptonite!
And continuing the theme from last post, the best roundup of the Convention On Modern Liberty I’ve seen is Alix’s liveblog.
The Convention For Modern Liberty
Most people who are even moderately interested will no doubt by now have seen a swarm of blog posts about the Convention For Modern Liberty down in London. What’s probably less well-reported are the various regional meetings, so I thought I’d give a quick rundown of the Manchester event.
I won’t talk too much about the opening and closing sections – streamed from the London event – because anyone who wants to can see them on the site/read about them, but I’ve got a few points about the last bit. It was interesting to me that both Philip Pullman and Brian Eno appear to have some basic knowledge of information theory or cybernetics, and even more interesting that both managed to take those insights and apply them to very different sets of metaphors for liberty – Pullman talking in terms of traditional morality while Eno talked about artistic creativity.
Chris Huhne was impressive when giving his pre-prepared bit, especially when distinguishing the Conservatives’ talk of ‘British rights’ from the more important *human* rights, but I think he fell down a little when answering a question from the floor. The questioner had mentioned that the general public were being asked to risk their jobs by engaging in civil disobedience by refusing ID cards, and wanted to know if the panel would take the same risks. Huhne (rightly, and amusingly) pointed out that he has a tiny majority so *is* risking his job, but he should also have pointed out that he had already done what the questioner was really asking, and announced publicly that he refused ever to register for an ID card.
Will Hutton, on the other hand, made some remarks about Islam that clearly made one of the Muslim members of the crowd in Manchester extremely annoyed, and for no good reason that I can see. You can say “Islam never had an Enlightenment” all you like, but the fact is that most Muslims living in the UK accept Enlightenment values to the same extent that most people do, and saying “Islam makes no distinction between the public and religious spheres” (or words to that extent) seems to me to be playing into the hands of the extremists who don’t make that distinction rather than supporting the moderates who do.
The only other note about the London event is a word of advice for Chuka Umumna , who seemed to have many of the right priorities, but unfortunately was speaking in politician-speak to such an extent that I found myself glazing over. The other people on that platform were speaking in plain English, saying what they think clearly and precisely. Umumna, on the other hand, used the word ‘mainstream’ as a verb at least ten times in a very short time period.One of the things that kept being asked, both in London and in Manchester, was how to ‘engage’ people. Well, I’m not sure people are disengaged, but if they are, it’s at least in part due to people using what is in effect a totally different language from anything they hear in their normal lives.
Between these streamed sessions, the Manchester event had two blocks of discussion sessions. In the morning one could choose between sessions run by Genewatch, Students for a Sensible Drug Policy, and the one I chose to attend, the session on The Database State run by my friend Dave Page of Manchester No2ID. While the conversation got sidetracked on occasion into other matters (incidentally, Dave, the documentary that was recommended by the bloke in the audience, The Power Of Nightmares, is available on archive.org, but as I said it has only a tangential connection, unlike Curtis’ later documentary The Trap – What Happened To Our Dreams Of Freedom?) but Dave did a good job of keeping the discussion on more or less productive lines, and I think shocked a lot of people who didn’t realise just how far our privacy had already been eroded.
Incidentally, one thing that surprised me was the breadth of opinion within the room (from someone wearing a T-shirt promoting right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones to an elderly gent who appeared to have an evangelical zeal to make everyone read the Good Book (the Good Book in this case being Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein) with every political shade, mainstream or otherwise, except I suspect the BNP, represented somewhere) but the unanimity of feeling that these incursions into personal privacy were unjustified and unjustifiable. While this was a self-selecting group to a large extent, the fact remains that a group of people, many of whom were not especially well-informed about this stuff, were nonetheless enthused by the end to ask “What can *I* do?” in great numbers.
At lunchtime I met with Mat, who’d arrived a little late because he had to travel from Yorkshire, and after lunch we debated for a while going to the session held by the Consenting Adult Action Network on Sexual Freedom (a subject which doesn’t get enough exposure in the media, and which I would be more active in if the conjunction of fat hairy bearded men with no social skills and the subject of sex were not immediately repellent to most people) but ended up going to the session organised by Unlock Democracy. We ended up sat in front of Sam Tarry, which could have been hugely embarassing (if you want to know why, see the comments thread in this post on Liberal Conspiracy ) but he turned out to be a really good bloke, and to be both right and informed on the issues.
This was very lucky, as Peter “Not the Fifth Doctor” Davidson, the Manchester head of Unlock Democracy, was clearly not as used to public speaking as Dave, and had a rough time of it. There were some disruptive elements (to be polite) in the audience, and that threw him to an extent, and for a while the session looked like it would turn into a shambles – people were talking across each other, bringing up irrelevant points, bringing up points that had already been answered, and generally acting like it was more important for them to ‘have their say’ than to listen to what had already been said and think about it.
Luckily, both Sam and Mat essentially took control for a while – both are clearly immensely knowledgeable on constitutional issues, and for a while the discussion mostly took the form of them providing factual corrections – “No, that’s not a medieval relic, single-member constituencies were only brought in in 1948″ “Actually, you’re wrong, the Maori people actually have a constitutionally-enshrined set of rights in New Zealand” and so forth – to people who didn’t let a lack of facts get in the way of a good opinion. I usually regard myself as the most intelligent and best informed person in the room, even when (as is often the case) that’s clearly untrue, but Mat and Sam were both so on the ball I was quite in awe of them. Mat also again brought up his view that Jack Straw was in the right to veto the FOIA request for cabinet documents, which I mention partly because Mat actually stated this again, and partly because he wants to test LiveJournal’s new pingback feature so I wanted to link to a post of his.
After a short while, the group calmed down enough for sensible discussion to resume. There was far less consensus in the Unlock Democracy session than there had been in the No2ID one, but nonetheless I believe it was useful to the people there, many of whom seemed to want to investigate these issues further as a result.
And just as importantly, this event, and the others round the country, help show it isn’t just ‘the Metropolitan chattering classes’ who care about basic civil liberties. It’s not a mass movement along the lines of the Iraq protests yet, but it’s clearly *not* just a handful of Guardianistas moaning over their muesli. With luck, the people who attended today will stay politically engaged, and will support actions like the Freedom Bill the Liberal Democrats want to bring in.
Off to bed now.


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