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Name: Wes
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Sunday, July 29, 2007

Holiday Hiatus

Munich (37) Alex Fear and the Mrs are officially on holiday for 2 weeks from tomorrow, so the blogging will be light. We're actually looking for new flat to rent but we may just skip to the beach if the sun keeps (or catch a cheap 'environMENTALly unfriendly' flight away for a few days).

In the meantime, any time I get at the 'puter will be devoted to testing a new CMS and thinking the best way to go about transferring this to a Wordpress blog (domain name/content). Look forward to changes, and better organisation of the resources (devoted to social action etc).

In the meantime, click on one of the labels below to read through some previous topics.

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

The Water In North London

C

Controversial
Putting myself up for a Northsquad hit again.


It's been hard to ignore the volume of pageviews I've had from "Felicity Jane Lowde" searches. I blogged on the Rachel North stalking saga back in May, and it generated the most comments I've ever had for a post. I've had links from other bloggers who, like me, took a step back and tried to see the issues from a rational viewpoint.

Sure Lowde may have been locked up and she may be in need of psychiatric care, but the fact that she is the 'loser' in this scenario, doesn't actually improve my opinion of Rachel North or her supporters one bit. In fact, I've been surprised by how judgmental and vitriolic these self-labeled 'liberal' bloggers really have been towards the mentally ill. In response to one attack blog, they ganged up and created multiple attack blogs. In response to nasty comments, they made nasty comments. I don't see the difference except that Lowde is behind bars and they are not.

I put comment moderation on this blog, when I started to get into a circular argument with a troll and it was successful in silencing the troll without silencing those that chose to voice reasonable disagreement. Which means I did not need to report anyone to the police for harassment.

Since there is still so much interest about this, I thought I'd take the initiative to try and compose a list of those blogs that have offered thoughtful analysis. If I link you below and it generates you unwanted attention, please let me know and I'll remove the link immediately (of course if you want me to add yours, likewise get in touch). Here is a list, in no particular order, of blogs that have not been drawn into mob-mentality:

Drowning and Other Fragments

Tim Worstall
Isadub
Living With The Conspiracy 24-7
Famous For 15 Megapixels
Vandaweb
Duff & Nonsense
Libel Lawyers London (links to a good article by Craig H)
Ronpanasonic
The Policemans Blog
Mike Powers Not A Blog
Southpawpunch

It's a sad fact that with the onset of web 2.0 making it easier for idiots to publish online, that a growing number now see it as a publicity extension, rather than the great technical and informational revolution that it is.

Take for example, Brian Retkin, who I'd never heard of before (but now his recent actions have allowed me to form an opinion of him), who is suing Google for... wait for it... linking to websites that have defamed him!

"Lawyers for Dotworlds, which registers distinctive domain names, have sent Google what lawyers call a "letter before action".

Mr Renton, 48, the company's managing director, of Wembley, north London, said he would sue if Google did not take down the links about his company posted anonymously. "Based on what I know today, I am determined to go ahead with this," he added." - The Telegraph

And guess where Mr Renton is from? ... North London! Something in the water, perhaps?

It's time to seriously consider the nature and the future of the internet, because free information is under threat. Perhaps a change in the law is required, but if the world continues to allow bloggers and web-publishers to be taken to court for publishing their own opinions or thoughts then we can kiss the internet as we know it goodbye.

We're one step away from a law companies setting up "No Win No Fee" sites for anyone who feels they have been libeled, defamed or had their feelings hurt.

Long live FJL's blog! Not because it's right or wrong, but because it's an opinion, a record, and it exists.

We should not modify the past in order to fit the present.

EDIT (After a quick thought): I wonder how much revenue/incoming links Google generates for Mr Retkins site, dotworlds.net? If he is successful in his idiotic lawsuit, couldn't Google just remove all links to any material mentioning dotworlds.net and therefore render his site ignored and obsolete?

That would be awesome... c'mon Google, your motto is "don't be evil" now teach an evildoer a lesson!

UPDATE: Southpawpunch emails...

Alex
I see that you have listed some blogs that mention  the Lowde/North affair
You may like to consider my post -
[added above]

(towards the end)
This post generated complaint emails from North.

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Monday, June 18, 2007

Londonland Part 1

This Post Is Rated: M for Mildly Offensive. Londoners may take particular offense at the revelations of this post (and they are welcome to it).


Last year I moved from Warwickshire, England to Ealing, Londonland and having been in this strange culture for several months now, I feel able to comment on it fully.

Londonland is ruled by Supreme Dictator Red Ken, whose rule has been unchallenged for 7 years and at this rate looks set to go on forever. Natives of Londonland refer to it simply as London, but it is quite obvious that the Supreme Dictator considers London to be a separate state from the country of England, where I come from. After all, in England, mayors of large cities tend to serve the inhabitants of their cities and are concerned with matters within their jurisdiction. It would be rare to see an English mayor flying all over the world to attract business and mass-migration, posturing on the world stage like a prime minister, president or royalty would.

The people of Londonland (Londoners) are very different from the English. For example, English people such as myself, enjoy fresh air and open spaces, so they buy and build property that allows them to experience these things. In Londonland, people have a fear of open spaces, so they cover anything green with flats and industrial parkland. Then they buy a large family houses and split each room into several living compartments for single or couples. The Mayor of London has erected a Congestion zone surrounding the City of London and the counties of Kensington and Chelsea. This is to create the maximum amount of congestion in the surrounding areas of Shepherds Bush, Hammersmith, Battersea, Vauxhall and Islington. This has the effect of reducing air quality as traffic takes longer to reach its destination.

The exchange rate between England and Londonland is 1:3. For every 1 pound you spend in England, you spend on average 3 pounds in Londonland. That's why in England a hairdresser is usually a low paid job, but in Londonland hairdressers outrank fund managers and investment bankers.

Londoners have no basic sense of geography. Many Londoners would be able to tell you what time you need to catch the Victoria line to Kings Cross but have no idea how to get home if you offer them a lift in the car. When queried about a place existing outside of the M25, they simply do not know, it doesn't exist.

There is no past-time that Londoners enjoy more than queing. Everywhere you go in Londonland you will find you have to queue. Infrastructure is designed to maximise queue potential by making buildings and streets as small as possible. If Londoners can't queue then they settle for overcrowding, which is just as much fun. The objective of the game is to wait until the tube train pulls up and then try to cram as many people as possible into one space. If you're not breathing the armpit of the person standing next to you, then you simply haven't got enough people in yet. A good tactic of 'overcrowding' is to stand as near to the door as possible to maximise the sardine effect. The Mayor of Londonland knows how much Londoners enjoy 'overcrowding', which is why he doesn't invest money into tube infrastructure to create more capacity.

Motorists of Londonland love nothing more than sitting in their car and going nowhere, especially in the hot sun. So as an alternative to the enjoyable activity of queuing to get into a car park, the Mayor of Londonland has done his best to recreate the a car park on Londonlands roads. This has been achieved by installing as many speed humps, traffic lights and one-way routes as possible. Of course this alone would not slow traffic down enough to simulate all the thrills of sitting in a car park, so the Mayor has also converted as many 2-lane roads as possible into single lanes. In order to do this he marked out long stretches of road with red tarmac. These lanes are specially reserved for the mythical London Bus. 'Mythical' because a bus is rarely seen on these strips of red tarmac, however, plenty can be spotted queuing amongst the cars on the black tarmac.

Londonland has very different traffic rules to England. For example, in Londonland, motorbikes and mopeds usually drive on the right side of the road, and only move onto the left side if the right side of the road is blocked by oncoming traffic. In England, where I am from, people generally use their car horns to express dissatisfaction with another driver, in a situation such as where the other driver has cut them up. In Londonland, the car horn is used to express apology or appreciation of your driving, ie. If someone cuts you up or crosses into your lane, it's not unusual for them to beep you on their horn, the longer they beep the more apologetic they are.

Finally, when living in Londonland it's important to emphasise how great living in Londonland is to visitors from England and other countries. A true Londoner will never mention the foibles detailed above because they don't see them. It makes me think of the line that Morpheus speaks to Neo from The Matrix...

"Unfortunately, no one can be told what the Matrix is. You have to see it for yourself... The Matrix is a system, Neo. That system is our enemy. But when you're inside, you look around, what do you see? Businessmen, teachers, lawyers, carpenters. The very minds of the people we are trying to save. But until we do, these people are still a part of that system and that makes them our enemy. You have to understand, most of these people are not ready to be unplugged. And many of them are so inured, so hopelessly dependent on the system, that they will fight to protect it."

Londonland is a Matrix. Bleak, concrete, systematic and ruled by sinister government programs and agents. Green spaces and parks seem to be artificial compared to England. There's nowhere you can go that other people aren't and we are watched by a melee of cameras and robots. Welcome to Londonland.

 

 

Discuss this post

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Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Battery Powered Death Machine

This Post Is Rated: C for Controversial. Would have been fun if it hadn't been about a life-threatening contraption built by environMENTALISTS.

If anyone wanted further proof that the environMENT has become more important that human life, last month Top Gear released the G-Wiz Crash tests:

This is the car Red Ken, Global Leader and Supreme Dictator of Londonland, wants you and everyone else to drive one of these awful death-traps.

Here's a piece cut from the FAQ on G-Wiz manufacturers site:

What about safety in the G-Wiz?
The G-Wiz is a breakthrough product in the fight against climate change... Thanks but we asked about safety
Excessive speed, no seat belts, alcohol & drug usage, and driver error are the main causes of accidents and injuries in the UK...
Just so you know, it's not our fault if you end up dead in one
Whilst larger, heavier cars in general perform better in crash tests, they are also more likely to injure other road users... Our cars will only kill you
The G-Wiz has a tubular steel space frame which surrounds the driver and passengers. This includes side impact bars and a front crumple zone designed to protect passengers in low speed collisions... Low speed collision = 2mph?

Why have no manufacturer Euro NCAP crash tests been done on the G-Wiz?
Neither the Euro NCAP test nor the Dept of Transport UNECE Regulation 94 test are required or recommended under the European regulation for quadricycles. Both tests are designed for M1 vehicles, primarily cars capable of speeds in excess of 100 mph and not low speed urban vehicles...
Wow, that's convenient, avoids any marketing problems.
Like all vehicle manufacturers RECC is however constantly reviewing safety features and innovation relative to usage... I feel safer already - as long as the other guy is driving one.

Source: Going Green FAQ

HT Gavin Ayling.

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Monday, May 14, 2007

Real Costs Of Immigration?

For any Daily Mail readers who may happen across this blog, I would like to advise that my wife is an immigrant to the UK. We paid a total of approximately £500 for our marriage visa+application, she pays a higher rate of tax and has no rights to claim any benefits for the first 5(?) years.

If local councils are concerned about the cost of immigration, may I advise them to take it up with the treasury and the home office, who may be able to help with some of the funding.

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Friday, April 13, 2007

Howard Opens His Mouth, We All Have To Smell It

Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard is considering banning individuals with HIV from Australia, saying they should not be allowed into the country.

Good call Mr Howard, because, you know, anyone with HIV must be a raving, sex maniac desperate to screw anything that moves.

Actually, I'll support his stance as long as he promises to take back all the Australians that have invaded Londonland, and promises not to let himself or any other Australians, HIV or otherwise, out of Australia.

Nice one.

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Sunday, April 08, 2007

Grave, Orwell, In, Turning, His, George

"On the wall outside his former residence - flat number 27B - where Orwell lived until his death in 1950, an historical plaque commemorates the anti-authoritarian author. And within 200 yards of the flat, there are 32 CCTV cameras, scanning every move." - This Is London
Referral: BoingBoing

How ironic and sad. Welcome to modern Britain, where it is 1984.

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Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Rush Hour Delight

Considering current problems with infrastructure, costs, service levels, ticket prices and safety, what would be the effect if an extra 1 million people used public transport tomorrow instead of cars?

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Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Economics

I find myself looking rather ironically at the Prime Ministers Chancellors budget announcements for a number of reasons.

1) It is the first time in my life, I find myself on the slight benefit side of a budget announcement, though I consider other members of my family who have not done so well.

2) It is interesting (but none-the-less welcome) to see that it is mostly Tories who are pointing out how Browns budget switcheroo affects the poorest tax-payers of society:

Gavin Ayling
Guido Fawkes
18 Doughty Street
Iain Dale
Praguetory

Interesting times...


Meanwhile The Man Who Would Be King provides a link to Virtual Economy 2002 where you can play at having a go at your own budget. I had a go and I think I fixed it. Most notable changes:
Reduced the rate of income tax (percent) : 6




Reduced basic rate of income tax (percent) : 10




Reduced higher rate of income tax (percent) : 35




Increased basic rate threshold (£pa) : 2,400




Increased personal allowance (£pa) : 6,000




Increased personal allowance for over 65s(£pa) : 8,000




Value Added Tax : abolish it




VAT on fuel (percent) : 0




Duty on tobacco per pkt 20 (pence per pkt 20) : triple it!




Duty on a pint of beer (pence) : double it!




Extra duty on a bottle of wine : triple it!




Extra duty on a bottle of whisky (pence) : triple it!




Extra duty on petrol per litre(pence) : abolish it!




Lowered vehicle excise duty (£p.a) for cars above 1,400cc : 50




Reduced base rate of interest : cut by 1/4 point




Increased department of health : increase by 10%




Increased department for education and employment (DFEE) : increase by 5%




Increased the ministry of defense : increase by 1%




Increased child benefit (per child) : 30




Lowered child benefit (extra for first child) : 2




Increased basic state pension : 100





Looking at the generated charts my changes brought about:
  • Economic growth boom 2003-2007 with a sharp decline by 2010
  • Steady increase in national income up to 2009
  • Sharp drop in unemployment to -7% I think that's a record- companies can't find enough employees- wages rise.
  • Inflation takes a nosedive in 2004- banks are actually paying interest instead of charging. lots of mortgage and equity release buyers, who are then made bankrupts in the 2000% rise over next 4 years.
  • government debt drops from current 40% to 10% by 2009 (after a small rise).
  • The exchange rate tanks... can anyone explain what this means?
  • To summarise everyone benefits- single, family and pensioners apart from unemployed couples with 2 children who are finding an increase in tax on tobacco and alcohol...
...however... I would like to point out that not all unemployed people, on benefits for whatever reason, drink, smoke and breed like rabbits. Many decent people have no choice but to rely on benefits, but are ultimately more responsible than the cocaine-snorting upper-middle classes.

See everyone can be stereotyped.

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Sunday, March 04, 2007

This Is What He Really Meant

Alex is aware that many have already weighed in on the PM's email, and given their response. Alex has been too busy screwing up his computer to give the FEAR (Fighting Evil And Reporting) analysis.

Here is that email, commentsin blue:

Thank you for taking the time to register your views about road pricing on the Downing Street website.

This petition was posted shortly before we published the Eddington Study, an independent review of Britain's transport network. This study set out long-term challenges and options for our transport network.

Like how can we screw more money out of motorists, but not make it look like we're raising existing taxes.

It made clear that congestion is a major problem to which there is no easy answer unless we're prepared to invest in infrastructure. One aspect of the study was highlighting how road pricing could provide a solution to these problems and that advances in technology put these plans within our reach. Of course it would be ten years or more before any national scheme was technologically, never mind politically, feasible future governments problem but we take the environMENTAL credit now.

That is the backdrop to this issue. As my response makes clear, this is not about imposing "stealth taxes" or introducing "Big Brother" surveillance. This is a complex subject, which cannot be resolved without a thorough investigation of all the options, combined with a full and frank debate about the choices we face at a local and national level but we're not prepared to do that, so we just decided to introduce road pricing instead. That's why I hope this detailed response will address your concerns and set out how we intend to take this issue forward by pretending to listen and ignoring you till you go away. I see this email as the beginning, not the end of the debate, and the links below provide an opportunity for you to take it further.

But let me be clear straight away: we have not made any decision about national road pricing on paper. Indeed we are simply not yet in a position to do so, like I said, future governments problem. We are, for now, working with some local authorities that are interested in establishing local schemes to help address local congestion problems using tax congestion charging. Pricing is not being forced on any area, but any schemes would teach us more about how road pricing would work and inform decisions on a national scheme (introduce the scheme and run it long enough that people give up protesting and future generations don't know any different- works a charm). And funds raised from these local schemes will be used to improve transport in those areas by directing funds to more money making congestion producing schemes.

One thing I suspect we can all agree is that congestion is bad-ass way of making money from motorists. It's bad-ass for business because it disrupts the delivery of goods and services which is why we restrict operating hours for delivery good to the hours congestion tax charging is running. It affects people's quality of life namely politicians, consultants and private firms by lining their pockets. And it is bad-ass for the environment -since Camarooni brought environMENTAL issues in, it's been the best moneymaking excuse ever- no-one argues when you mention the environMENT. That is why tackling congestion is a key priority for any Government wishing to increase revenue with low opposition.

Congestion is predicted to increase by 25% by 2015, our revenues: double that figure- yippee. This is being driven by economic prosperity. There are 6 million more vehicles on the road now than in 1997, and predictions are that this trend will continue - more profits, yippee.

Part of the solution is to improve public transport, and to make the most of the existing road network (ah, that old chesnut). We have more than doubled investment since 1997, spending £2.5 billion this year on buses and over £4 billion on trains (compensation for poor service, consultants and PR) - helping to explain why more people are using them than for decades. And we're committed to sustaining this investment, with over £140 billion of investment planned between now and 2015. We're also putting a great deal of effort into improving traffic cashflows - for example, over 1000 Highways Agency Traffic Officers now help to keep motorway traffic moving by slowing everyone down when there's an accident - bravo!

But all the evidence shows that improving public transport and tackling traffic bottlenecks will not by themselves prevent congestion getting worse since we plan to expand congestion zones and force more traffic around the edges. So we have a difficult choice to make about how we tackle the expected increase in congestion. This is a challenge that all political leaders have to face up to, and not just in the UK. For example, road pricing schemes are already in operation in Italy, Norway and Singapore (instead of car tax), and others, such as the Netherlands, are developing schemes. Towns and cities across the world are looking at road pricing as a means of addressing congestion.

One option would be to allow congestion charging zones to grow unchecked. Given the forecast growth in traffic, doing nothing would mean that journeys within and between cities would take longer, and be less reliable and raise more revenue -yippee. I think that would be bad-ass for businesses, individuals and the environment. And the costs on us all will be real - congestion could cost an extra £22 billion in wasted time in England by 2025, of which £10-12 billion would be the direct cost on businesses so let's, err, charge you instead, to reduce those costs to, err, you.

A second option would be to try to build our way out of congestion. We could, of course, add new lanes to our motorways, widen roads in our congested city centres, and build new routes across the countryside but that would cost money. Certainly in some places new capacity will be part of the story. That is why we are widening the M25, M1 and M62. But I think people agree that we cannot simply build more and more roads, particularly when the evidence suggests that traffic quickly grows to fill any new capacity (so let's keep existing capacity and just cram more in).

Tackling congestion in this way would also be extremely costly, requiring substantial sums to be diverted from other services such as education and health, or increases in taxes which is why we are introducing increases in, err, taxes C-charging, but not investing in infrastructure- brilliant. If I tell you that one mile of new motorway costs as much as £30m, you'll have an idea of the sums this approach would entail (nice round figure that).

That is why I believe that at least we need to explore (read: introduce it and wait for the protests to die down and later generations are indifferent) the contribution road pricing can make to tackling congestion. It would not be in anyone's interests, especially those of motorists, to slam the door shut on road pricing without exploring it further.

It has been calculated that a national scheme - as part of a wider package of measures - could cut congestion significantly through small changes in our overall travel patterns like helicopter to work instead. But any technology used would have to give definite guarantees about privacy being protected - as it should be -trust me- would I lie to you?. Existing technologies, such as mobile phones and pay-as-you-drive insurance schemes, may well be able to play a role here, by ensuring that the Government doesn't hold information about where vehicles have been. But there may also be opportunities presented by developments in new technology so we're not ruling surveillance out. Just as new medical technology is changing the NHS, so there will be changes in the transport sector. Our aim is to relieve traffic jams, not create a "Big Brother" society.

I know many people's biggest worry about road pricing is that it will be a "stealth tax" on motorists. It won't. Road pricing is about tackling congestion (the c-word again, don't think tax, think congestion).

Clearly if we decided to move towards a system of national road pricing, there could be a case for moving away from the current system of motoring taxation but we probably won't, we'll just wait for the protest to die down. This could mean that those who use their car less, or can travel at less congested times, in less congested areas, for example in rural areas, would benefit from lower motoring costs overall so just take the rural route through Peterborough to work - you'll be ok. Those who travel longer distances at peak times and in more congested areas would pay more. But those are decisions for the future government, not me, hee hee. At this stage, when no firm decision has been taken as to whether we will move towards a national scheme, stories about possible costs are simply not credible the figures are too small, since they depend on so many variables yet to be investigated (consultants fees, management bonuses, local authority kickbacks), never mind decided.

Before we take any decisions about a national pricing scheme, we know that we have to have a system that works (road tax anyone?). A system that respects our privacy as individuals. A system that is fair. I fully accept that we don't have all the answers yet. That is why we are not rushing headlong into a national road pricing scheme. Before we take any decisions there would be further consultations (re: I tell you what we're doing, you eventually agree or go away). Specially selected members of the public will, of course, have their say, as will Parliament.

We don't want to continue this debate, so that we can build a consensus around the best way to raise more revenue guised as reduce congestion, protect the environment and support our businesses. If you want to find out more, please visit the attached links to more detailed information, and which also give opportunities to engage in further brainwashing and stifle debate.

Yours sincerely,
Please, just agree with me,
Tony Blair

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Reason #1 Canada Is Better Than Londonland

Actually, there is a bunch of reasons and BarrenAlbion has thoughtfully laid them all out in her post: For the love of God, anything but SAHM/working moms

Here are some qoutes taken completely out of context, since BA is remarking from a "citizen of the world" perspective on appreciating differences. Alex simply considers it 2nd world standards.
"...a cost of living which is vastly better than that of the UK."
"Uh, gee. A two bed flat in a nice part of a mostly shit city or a five bed, five bath house with a big yard? It's a hard decision to make."
"if you go to the Post Office to get a stamp, they won't take the letter you are buying the stamp for. Even though you are at the counter and paying for the stamp, you have to take the letter and put it in a post box which can usually be found outside the Post Office itself."
[Alex would like to note that this happens only in the country of London and not the country of England, where he originates from.]
"Look at us here in provincial England with our lilliputian appliances. Aren't we quaint?"
"We could do without a social care system which rewards you for having three kids by the time you're 19, or one which pays people more than my salary for being unemployed. I hate how the country seems overrun by a bunch of loutish, drunken idiots, even if you live (or think you live) in a relatively nice place."
"Never in the US was I accosted by a group of 8 year olds asking me for money so they could go buy cigarettes, nor had I ever witnessed a woman being beaten up by a man on the street in clear view of dozens of pedestrians..."
"If I can raise P. in an environment where she doesn't have to see men pissing in the streets, I'd prefer to do so."

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