Shades of Grey

This was a transient blog- now dormant.

The Barbecue Police

Over at spiked, Nathalie Rothschild tells the story of how Camden’s barmy PC event rules threatens a long established Summer Festival by stifling it through bureaucratic nonsense.

Story HERE (You all come back now!)

This is the sort of thing that has turned me off getting involved in community events.

I’d suggest Primrose Hill Community Centre sticks two fingers up to the council and raises the money privately.

And that Camden Council concentrates on what it does least worst;- emptying the bins.

May 15, 2007 Posted by | political correctness | Leave a Comment

Know your neighbour


Bradford University school of lifelong learning and development are running a Civic and Community event today.

Gypsies and Travellers have been resident in the UK for over 500 years. What do we really know about these communities who have been our neighbours for so long?

Programme
09.45 Registration
10.00 Brief History of Gypsies and Travellers including who are they?
10.30 Question and answer session
11.00 Break
11.30 Gypsy and Traveller Culture
12.30 Quiz
13.00 Lunch
14.00 Answers and comments
14.45 Do Mang Mandi DVD
15.00 Break
15.15 Travellers today
16.00 Question and answer session
16.30 End

I think “Do Mang Mandi” means “You tell me” but there isn’t much on Google.

I’m not going to the event, I’m not that interested and it all sounds horribly politically correct.

My own experience of Gypsies/travellers is reasonably benign, limited to being sold lucky heather and being in a car that was kicked by a drunken one after a Councillor got out to read an lamppost enforcement notice.

I’ve heard some horror stories though, including from senior police officers.

(I was once at a public meeting where a District Commander was forcefully making a point that illegal action would not be tolerated. She referred to them as Gypsies throughout and had actively encouraged the farmer whose field they were trespassing in to get his tractor and muck spreader out. She was berated by some lefty Councillor for her callousness and how the problem was with her, not them. She replied that she didn’t care what trendy name, label or excuse was used, criminal behaviour made them criminals and they needed to be dealt with firmly).

April 28, 2007 Posted by | political correctness | Leave a Comment

The swindle…

…is now online at Google Videos. The Media may be strangely silent on the matter but the Blogosphere will spread it where the papers fear to tread.

There are already 920 comments on Little Green Footballs although I haven’t studied them.

Hat tip samizdata.

March 12, 2007 Posted by | Global warming, political correctness | Leave a Comment

The Great Global Warming Swindle

I’ve watched about twenty minutes of it so far. I’ve been a skeptic ever since people who expressed doubts started to become pilloried as it had all the classic symptoms of PC- death to the heretic.

When Bjorn Lomborg changed his green views and the ad hominem attacks started I knew that there was more to this than meets the eye.

It strikes me that if it is a big swindle (and the indications are strong that it is) then our MP Colin Challen is going to look a bit of a fool.

(When searching for the phrase Fool and Colin Challen together in Google just to see if anyone already thought he was one, I found something very foolish about American High School Puritanism, worth a look.)

March 9, 2007 Posted by | climate change, Global warming, political correctness | 2 Comments

Morleygate update

The Morley Observer & Advertiser have been on the phone, asking if I would mind if they turned my letter into an article as it was a bit too long for the letters page. (They normally attend Full Council but Erica the reporter couldn’t make it this time.)

I’d be delighted, I said. I look forward to Wednesday’s paper with interest…

We have the Mayor’s Ball tomorrow night, it will be interesting to see if news has spread about the cat loose amongst the pidgeons.

I make a great friend but a terrible enemy!

March 9, 2007 Posted by | Local politics, morley together, Morleygate, political correctness | Leave a Comment

All kinds of discrimination are unacceptable

The title is part of a resolution being presented to Morley Town Council next Wednesday. It is tied in with a local campaign called “Morley together” that I have expressed reservations about before and am still uncomfortable with the “if you’re not for us, you’re against us!” approach. I realise it is to keep the BNP out but I think it is just as much about keeping Labour in. There is nothing online about the campaign on the MP’s website, indeed he hasn’t updated it since April. (He has been somewhat distracted by events, however.)

I have to say that the wording is a nonsense- discrimination is essential to success in life. If we don’t discriminate we employ the lazy & feckless, get conned into buying shoddy goods and don’t have any choice of who our friends are. Our immigration policies discriminate against Turkish bricklayers compared to Polish ones and our Universities discriminate the applicants with merit from the ones who are of insufficient ability. This is also known as discernment. Once upon a time, to be described as being discriminating was a compliment!

Question- is discriminating against racists and Xenophobes unacceptable?

As an individualist, I prefer “no preference, no prejudice” (ukiphome) to any Politically Correct double-speak about racism and fairness. Life isn’t fair, get over it.

Maybe I should sing this song at the Council meeting?

(Hat tip Thunderdragon)

Postscript: As ever, Perry Havilland of Samizdata challenges accepted wisdom in a piece called In praise of discrimination

“Few Guardian readers seem to have a problem ‘discriminating’ against racists.”

March 1, 2007 Posted by | discrimination, Equality, political correctness, racism, xenophobia | 1 Comment

Togetherness in Morley

The Morley Observer & Advertiser comes out on Wednesdays. This week, a few things caught my eye.

On page Five, there is mention that the Town Council precept will remain the same and I would have voted against putting it up anyway (I’d like to see it come down). This is good news for Morleians but it does rely on us drawing from reserves again this year, some £55k. The Reserves are higher than normal for various reasons but the current spending level is not sustainable in the longer term and we will have to cut our coat according to our cloth which means less spending or more local tax. I go for the former, unsurprisingly…

In the letters pages, there is a kerfuffle about some comments made in a letter from a BNP supporter last week, related to the Literature Festival. I have to say that the words went straight over my head as I could not recollect taking offense at them (and can’t be arsed to to rooting around in the recycle bin).

I read Letters to the Editor with my Cynic filter engaged, namely- what are they saying, why are they saying it and is there more to this than meets the eye?

Some of my fellow politicians, however, probably more concerned about the forthcoming election battle in May than I am, have their PPS filters engaged (Political point Scoring). The letter headlines are “Shameful attempt at brainwashing”, “Approved reading?”, “Desperation setting in” (from a different BNP supporter) and “Come to the Forum” about our Leisure Centre. Letters three and four will probably result in further banter next week.

Over on page 12, the news is about “Stewie Mac” (his radio name, or at least that is what I call him). He has announced that he is standing again as a Leeds City Councillor in May, although last Wednesday he told me he was still undecided. He will be cringing at such a lengthly article and a picture of him from his days as a Marxist Bingo caller back in the swinging sixties. (Have you played Marxist Bingo? It is a bit like ordinary Bingo, except that when you win, instead of HOUSE! you shout PROPERTY IS THEFT!) There are some revealing comments on why he is an independent rather than a Morley Borough Independent. I like SMc, he is perceived by some as a loose cannon, exactly what the same people think of me!

Finally, on page 19, there is the “Morley Together” campaign launch, where “…organisations and businesses in Morley are being challenged to sign up to a campaign to tackle racism and xenophobia.” Of course the principles of it are exemplary, even if the grammar isn’t (there is a comma before an “and”, I’m picky about that sort of thing) but it is from Colin Challen our MP and I do wonder if it is a localised Morley thing or a national Labour thing wherever they are losing ground to BNP. I read this with an increasing sense of unease as the tone implies that if you are not with us, you are against us.

I consider the term Racism to now be devalued to the point where Racist is a knee-jerk response to any opinions someone else doesn’t agree with, or where the reactor feels that something should not be said out loud based on received wisdom, even though the statement may be patently true. Is it racist to say that in black street culture school isn’t cool? Of course not. Is it racist to say Paki shop? it depends on the context, but generally, I would say no, even putting to one side that being Pakistani is not a race but a cultural grouping. Up until relatively recently, it simply referred to a local general store trader open for extended hours ran by a family business originally from the Indian Sub-Continent. It still does of course, but now there is the worry that someone (undefined) might take offense.

(As an aside here, I was in my local Premier Store recently which is ran by a Sikh family. A girl in the queue in front of me was talking on her mobile and as she was about to get served she said “I’ll be about five minutes, I’m just buying some Fags in the Paki Shop.” She then realised what she had said and looked sheepish. The owner and myself exchanged knowing smiles! I was tempted to tell her that she should have called it a “Sikh Shop” but wouldn’t have wanted the owner thinking that I was taking the piss.I also suspect that she wouldn’t have known or cared about the cultural differnce between the various Asian groupings…

I’d probably take offence to someone referring to “Pakis” in an offensive or ignorant manner but I much prefer Bigotry as the more accurate term rather than Racism. The other nuisance is that “Paki” is a shortening of “Pakistani” which is a bit of a mouthful with four syllables. (I never got concerned being called a Brit in Saudi, but did get uncomfortable over there on one occasion with a number of Scots (& their Wives) that I had a working relationship with but I didn’t know too well, when it became apparent that they rather resented the English and their good natured taunts weren’t that good natured).

Back to the campaign. It has wisely stayed clear of a number of Cliches that sound increasingly ridiculous in the political correctness backlash. It doesn’t mention issues, it uses tolerance instead of respect and it doesn’t emplore us to celebrate diversity.

Personally, my own value system tells me to follow the path of polite indifference. It sounds a bit harsh when said cold but so does “So what?” to cold calling salesmen!
Polite is the tolerance bit. I see no reason to be rude to people because of their own beliefs but it doesn’t mean that I have to respect the beliefs they hold. Indifference simply means I’m not really interested in the detail of all of the mumbo jumbo in the baggage people and cultures carry around with them. Indifference does not make someone a racist in the same way that I choose to be indifferent to Opera, Modern Jazz, Football and Dogging. This doesn’t mean that I am a cruel heartless bastard, just that I get interested in things, people and culture for some particular trigger reason of my own choice, rather than being told to.

We are seriously screwed up in this country over the whole business of being nice to victim groups, the various minorities having now being calculated to actually add up together as the majority of the population!(see We’re (nearly) all victims now). It must make the do-gooders wring their hands in dismay when they realise that many of the victims often hold even more intolerant views than white van man.

I rather like the No prejudice, no preference strapline which I stumbled across recently at UKIPHome. An interesting blog but how mainstream UKIP it actually is I’m not certain. It is parodied here.

So, should any organisation I’m involved in sign up to Morley Together if the letter pops through the Chairman’s letterbox? Colin has even said that we can approach him to take the pledge. Sorry Mate, I’m uncertain at this stage and somewhat cynical. I’d like to see the invite and maybe even chat with CC to try and work out his motives, because driving the BNP out of Morley has a big benefit for the Labour vote. For now, I go with polite indifference vergalised as No thanks, I’m not interested. Treat it like a pushy car salesman trying to close an unwanted deal, or a Jehova’s Witness wanting to know if you believe that God is your Saviour. Dust down your assertivenes techniques, starting with broken record.

No thanks, I’m not interested…no thanks, I’m not interested…no thanks, I’m not interested…

January 10, 2007 Posted by | morley together, Morleygate, political correctness | Leave a Comment

   

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.