Wednesday, December 12, 2007

[zep concert] we did it, ahmet

Some comments:
A truly amazing concert. The band all performed with awesome energy for two and half hours, it blew everyone away. If these guys rock like this at 60 years old, I wonder how amazing they were in their prime! Anyway, it was worth every penny. This was the best concert I have ever seen! [Paul, London]
Quite simply the greatest gig I have ever had the pleasure of attending. 'Kashmir' and 'Dazed...' were the highlights of an outstanding set list. £83k a ticket? Worth every penny I'd say... [Mark Franklin, Witney, UK]

Straight from the groin, no messing about, and no playing safe. They did it without a net and proved they are THE best band ever. I just hope they don't do it again.
[Bert Priest, Kidderminster, UK]

They were a great band, but now they're old men. Plant can't hit and hold the same notes, Page looks like old father time. Please don't play another gig. Don't ruin your legacy (like the Stones have).
Wess, Notts
Champs will always be champs but I wonder when it's time to hang up the plectrum? Watching dinosaurs like Nazareth, The Boss and Rod Stewart and self-parodies like the Stones today strutting around to the horror of the younger generations, should they say to the youngies: "Stuff you!" and just keep strutting or should they move into more mellow music, more befitting their years?

Don't get me wrong, there's the rager inside me which breaks out all the time and I think the little ladies like it in small doses as a break from the usual fare, so maybe Zep did it right - coming back for a one off, which I don't believe was just for the money.

Perhaps, in the end, the only criterion was whether people felt they had their money's worth and whether they came home afterwards feeling satisfied. To hell with the detractors.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

[happy birthday] lil bit

[the grand tour] now a gap year

Way to go in the 1880s

The Grand Tour was really something. Poor transport, impassable Alps, the food question and also:

The Grand Tour was also well known as a chance for its participants to sow their oats as they were "generally young, healthy, wealthy and poorly, if at all supervised". Due to the rampant spread of venereal disease, sexual exploits while abroad were frowned upon by those back home, but regarded as just another aspect of the trip.

And yet it was cultural and the young men did not return wholly ignorant. The 1800s opened up rail travel but the idea of a long tour was still for the rich, such as with the exciting Orient Express, which I've walked past but not been on:

The original route, which first ran on October 4, 1883, was from Paris, Gare de l'Est, to GiurgiuRomania via Munich and Vienna. At Giurgiu, passengers were ferried across the Danube to Rousse in Bulgaria to pick up another train to Varna, from where they completed their journey to Istanbul by ferry.
Incidentally, this excellent article on the various trains bearing the name shows that the Orient Express, in one of it forms, still runs Paris to Istanbul, if you have the money for it.




There's something about those days never to be recaptured, even so. Fast forward to modern times:

... the first 'Gap Years' actually started in the UK in the 1960's when the baby-boomer generation in the midst of the 'Swinging sixties' headed off to India on the infamous Hippie Trails, inventing the 'independent travel market' ...

Now it's become far more mainstream and even desirable to have taken that year:

“It's important to differentiate yourself in today’s competitive graduate job market,” says Paul Lyons, the managing director of recruitment specialist Ambition. “And a gap year lets you do that.”

According to Lyons, apart from helping you stand out from the crowd, a gap year also has the professional advantage of demonstrating your life skills and positive personality traits.


“For example, a self-planned, self-funded year spent canoeing down the Amazon is likely to be better regarded professionally than a structured year, funded by parents, spent learning Spanish in Barcelona.”

I never did it like this - I suppose I was a Bill Bryson type "flashpacker". That pack is sitting under the cupboard here now as I type and it does bring back pleasant memories. But all my travelling was done well after uni days when I was earning my own crust and I confess I was using a first class eurail pass.

Finland was the closest I ever got to being a bona fide backpacker when for one night I stayed at a dreaded hostel and was appalled by the whole scene.

Next day I marched into the info place in Rovaniemi, asked for a billet with a family, hired a bike and tootled across the river and visited the people. They just happened to possess a 25 year old unmarried daughter of nordic beauty who invited me to use her sauna so that was far more my thing.

No need to mention breaking my wrist two days later on the luge.

Of course, it doesn't have to involve travel - there might be other things you'd do. Did any of you have a gap year and what did you do?

[economic forecast] not from me

You can always trust a banker.

Would you like my economic forecast for the west 2007 through 2011?

No, I don't blame you for your reticence - I'm an amateur, after all. Would you read one from Morgan Stanley then? They appear to know what they're talking about. They conclude, in the final paragraph:

One risk is that both our outlook and the Fed’s are too optimistic, because they pay too much attention to the economic resilience of the past, and not enough to the future effects of financial and economic headwinds and the dynamics of the downturn. Dramatically slower growth in domestic demand leaves it vulnerable to shocks.

Insufficient Fed action could again threaten a deeper economic slowdown. A contrasting risk is that we’re swayed by Wall Street pessimism and that things may be better on
Main Street.

In our view, downside risks still dominate.

[yorkshire europe] are we missing something here

John Trenchard has latched onto this - click on each pic below, one by one, to enlarge it:


Excuse me? Yorkshire and Humber Assembly? A funded legislature? And getting its funding from whom? Oh, it's a Regional Assembly - but they all died, didn't they, when the British people fought and rejected them? Click on the pics below to enlarge:



What the F is going on here? As John says:

2010 appears to be a deadline of sorts. And the mention of "Regional Ministers" is interesting. I wonder who'll they'll be reporting to.

The Fundamental Interconnectedness of All Things


Quite frankly, there is so much that I'm not very good at that one tends to avoid these things like the plague.

Weak, I know but there it is.

Playing tennis, dancing, suffering fools gladly [which is a bit rich because I've done so many foolish things in my time] - these are just a few. For example, I've always underestimated the human capacity to overcome the direst of circumstances and adapt or win against all odds; it's often turned out I was wide of the mark.

Perfect example here is predicting football results or betting on a horse - better I just don't try.

But in other aspects of human nature and group behaviour, especially if not emotionally involved with the person and abandoning all modesty here - I'm rarely wrong [the Poirot inside] and this can be put down to a Miss Marple quote in A Christmas Tragedy:

[How few people] ever stop to think. They really don't examine the facts. Surely, the whole crux of the matter is this - how often is tittle tattle, as you call it, true. I think if, as I say, they really examined the facts, they'd find it was true nine times out of ten. That's really what makes people so annoyed about it!

"The inspired guess," said Sir Henry.

"No, not that, not that at all. It's really a matter of practice and experience. An Egyptologist, so I've heard, if you show him one of those curious little beetles, can tell you by the look and feel of thing what date BC it was or if it's a Birmingham imitation. And he can't always give a definite rule for doing so. He just knows. His life has been spent handling such things.

And so, you see, superfluous women, as you might put it, get to become what you might term experts. Now young people nowadays, they talk very freely about things that weren't mentioned in my young days but on the other hand, their minds are very innocent. They believe in everyone and everything. And if one tries to warn them, ever so gently, they tell one that one has a mind like a sink.

... My nephew Raymond tells me that I haven't a shadow of proof but I knew ...

As a superfluous man, with a certain amount of the feminine in the psyche, certain things have always been so obvious and when I've discussed them with people, expecting they'd find them equally obvious, I've been amazed that something simply stops them seeing it. Or else they have an agenda in not seeing and accepting unpleasant truths, especially about those they revere.

Me, I have no sentiment this way, as Miss Marple didn't. Anyone can be foolish or crooked, no matter how high or low. Unfortunately, this breeds a certain distrust and often people are reticent to talk, for fear of what it will reveal. That was especially so as a Headmaster. I'm sure they realized I'd never make use of it, except to try to help but still - they'd be trying to put certain constructions on things which were quite simply not so or else missed the main point.

And they'd resent that I didn't accept their constructions and they'd often quite savagely turn on me as if to say: "Well, what makes you so special? Why should truth reside in you and not in me?"

It doesn't.

As Holmes might say: "You see just as far as I, Watson but you don't observe." Arrogant bstd? Not at all. There's just a history of keen interest in and the honing of these particular skills, that's all. You do it in your field, I do it in mine. But you'd call me a smug bstd, all the same.

Tangentially, there's one thing I know to be an absolute lie and one of the cleverest lies ever perpetrated on the world. And that's that there is and must always be, a dualistic "balance" between good and evil in the world. The idea is so simple and combines a number of universal truths but in a most destructive, twisted cocktail.

This theory long ago ingratiated itself into and is integrated into certain Eastern religions, drawing on what is a truth - and the Australian koori know this full well - that there must be a balance of eco-systems, of the earth and its inhabitants and that people must continually aspire to wisdom and nirvana.

Then, in that spirit of balance, tolerance and compromise, laced with religious terminology and an all-seeing pseudo-wisdom, there is introduced a single evil thought - that there must also be war to "balance" peace, that there must be cruelty to "balance" kindness and that there must be perversion to "balance" purity.

They can point to ancient, frail texts to support it all but it's a lie just the same, simply because of the eventual fruits of the idea - the idea does not promote harmony on earth at all but seriously unbalances the environment and eco-systems and why? Because this particular dualism takes the metaphor out of context, takes the analogy too far into unsupportable and unsustainable territory and relies on its debunking being so complex and difficult.

Because to debunk this notion, one must unravel each thread, one by one. One must refer to a model of living which does not and never has been given a chance to exist because the other model, being childishly simple to grasp, is thus grasped by barely sentient young people who find it much easier to come to terms with than the truth. And then they grow older and tacitly pass this model down.

You can test the truth out in a micro-environment. Put one thousand people in one square kilometre. Every time one feels like berating another or issuing an ultimatum, don't. Do a kindness instead, though it goes against the grain. Do the hard thing each time and then, as with physical exercise, eventually the hard thing becomes easier and easier to do.

Realize there are just too many people in that square kilometre and that a spirit of compromise is the only sustainable way. Take your destructive urges out by breaking a stick or kicking a rock but these become less and less anyway, the less you utilize them.

Every time you need something, ask if it is really necessary. Every time you need a kilo of this, buy 0.7 of a kilo instead. Practise a certain frugality but not in generosity. On the road, if there is one space and two cars going for it, hold back and let him have it. And so on. In this model there is no "balance" between good and evil.

There is simply no evil.

And what of the rogue element who doesn't play by the spirit of the game? Nothing - as long as everyone else is tenaciously clinging to the model, knowing full well that happiness and security only come through a spirit of give and take, the rogue element will eventually die off.

And this brings us to the second thread - no compulsion.

Disdain is your strongest tool here, non-inclusion of the destructive behaviour, not of the person himself. Every parent knows that you don't dislike the child - you dislike the behaviour. No need to incarcerate, no need to attack, let the rogue element dash itself to pieces on the rock or else come to its senses and rejoin its mates. Always hold out the olive branch and always hold up the sustainable model to follow.

And where are excitement, fun and really wild things under this model?

Here is another lie to debunk - why can't there still be rollicking fun and raucous laughter? Dost thou think there'll be no more cakes and ale? Even a bawdy joke - for goodness sake, is no bad thing. We're sentient, sensual beings, we're sexual. Physically towards one woman because the ultimate pleasure is growing into and upwards with one another, though we notice many others along the way and have a laugh. We are passionate - so let's act passionately. What's the problem?

The problem is the lure of obsession and excess.

You think I don't know deep anatomical exploration, paralytic drinking, tangerine dreams of penguins at dawn and psychic paradise, the thrill of speed and black humour? You think these words are coming out of a sheltered churchgoer? The thing is, there are even higher things than these and the exquisite pleasure in these depends on your ability to regulate your intake of everything, in your capacity for finesse and passion at the one time.

So if a person urges you to indulge your libido or your anger without limit, to substitute substances for higher pleasures, then he's twisting the human quality of constraint and sufficiency, suppressing the equally human qualities of loyalty and trust and seriously unbalancing the psyche. The road he's leading you down leads only to a weakening of the character and eventual desolation.

It's the law of diminishing returns, the law of excessive consumption demanding greater and greater kicks to get the same buzz. Or greater and greater perversion of the real balance in one's life. It's the Emperor Palpatine urging, urging, urging Vader and Skywalker to give way to the misnamed "dark side".

Misnamed because there are no "sides". Again, this suggests a balance between two equal and opposed forces, whereas, in fact the sustainable model is quite different.

The true balance is between all living things and inanimate things in the world [Australian aborigines again or if you prefer - Dirk Gently's fundamental interconnectedness of all things] but humans need to regulate themselves, hone their hardness and ability to survive, through self-denial, through exercise, through controlling the will, through pleasure - just enough of it and once or twice too much, for artistic effect.

Passion should be poured into projects rather than destructive behaviours, anger should be directed at those who would nobble this model, rather than at fellow humans.

In a species which has the capacity to overcome its base instincts and has the capacity to reach for higher things, what then will rein in it's excesses? There has to be something.

In this model of the world, evil is seen for what it really is - not a glorious counterbalance but a sad, tacky cancer entering from without, making its home in the human host [like in Alien], a virus trying to nibble at the edges of a powerful model - simple affection - and trying to pervert it.

It's a wolf trying to separate the lamb from the flock, it's a mentally sick entity trying to turn everyone else into equally mentally sick entities and gaining some short-term comfort from doing so.

So the person calling for all people to give way to their worst excesses and urging them to call it pleasure, this person has become a sad shell, his humanity suppressed [whereas he believes it is shining]; he's being used by a powerful force for its own purposes and ends up calling white black and black white].

There's no reasoning because shells can't be reasoned with.

But the door's always open and this human is always welcome back, if only he will come. I'm referring to NO one person here but to a type, all too common these days. I'm referring to an idea which has taken root [to switch metaphors] and is spreading like a vine across the world. I'm referring to a false model which, as Miss Marple indicated, if people would just sit back and think it through, they'd see through.

But more positively, it is presenting a different model, a more sustainable one and one more appropriate for this time of year.

Monday, December 10, 2007

[patek philippe] signe de richesse et de folie

Кликете фото

Fondée en 1851 par le polonais Antoine Norbert de Patek et l'horloger français Adrien Philippe, la marque fut reprise par la famille Stern en 1932 qui en est à ce jour toujours propriétaire. Maintenant:

Plus que les heures, les montres alignent des records de prix. Une Patek Philippe de 1944 s’est ainsi récemment vendue 1.5 million d’euros, une somme inégalée pour une montre en acier. A ses côtés, la Breguet de l’impératrice Joséphine ferait presque pâle figure, avec ses 913 810 euros.

En clair, les nouveaux riches d’Asie et de Russie dopent particulièrement le secteur du luxe, de même que les marchés traditionnels, Etats-Unis et Europe, restent fascinés par le faste de ces produits.

Besonderer Beliebtheit erfreuen sich insbesondere Modelle mit Ewigen Kalender und mit Chronographenfunktion was sich auch deutlich in den Auktionsergebnissen älterer Modelle zeigt. Ebenso hält Patek Philippe bis dato auch den Rekord für die teuerste im Rahmen einer Auktion versteigerten Armbanduhr, das Modell "World Time" aus Platin erzielte einen Preis von ca. 6,5 Millionen CHF.

И не забудьте Millionaire Fair 2007. Амстердам - Дата: 07.12.2007 — 11.12.2007. Ваш самелот готов!

[bomb quiz] how you learned to stop worrying


In some questions, more than one answer might be possible:

1. The first nuclear test bomb was exploded in New Mexico and was called:

a. The gadget
b. Trinity
c. The logos

2. The second, dropped on Hiroshima, was called:

a. Thin Man
b. Fat Man
c. Little Boy

3. The plane used to drop it was:

a. Bockscar
b. Enola Gay
c. Trinity

4. The third, dropped on Nagasaki, was called:

a. Thin Man
b. Fat Man
c. Little Boy

5. The plane used to drop it was:

a. Bockscar
b. Enola Gay
c. Trinity

6. The project used to develop the bomb was called:

a. Manhattan Transfer
b. Manhattan Project
c. Trinity

7. Which of these did not work on the project?

a. J. Robert Oppenheimer
b. Frank Oppenheimer
c. Werner von Braun

8. Which of these did not drop a bomb on a Japanese city?

a. Major James I. Hopkins, Jr.
b. Colonel Paul W. Tibbets, Jr.
c. Major Charles W. Sweeney

9. Which of these was the original target?

a. Nagaoka
b. Hitachi
c. Kokura

10. Who said: "I have become Death, the destroyer of worlds?"

a. The Bhagavad Gita
b. Frank Oppenheimer
c. J. Robert Oppenheimer

Answers

1a, 2c, 3b, 4b, 5a, 6b, 7c, 8a, 9c, 10a,c

[blogfocus monday] snow

Snow begins this first Focus ever on a Monday and ends it too:

1. Richard Havers' new header [above] is fabulous and here are his thoughts on jazz too:

I’ve been a jazz fan for just about as long as I’ve been a music fan. Amongst the many 78s my Dad and I bought at jumble sales were big band jazz, as well as trad jazz records. I’ve also loved the sound of great piano playing. Both my maternal grandparents played piano, my grandad was a piano tuner - it’s the one instrument that I’ve always wanted to play.

2. Mopsa has an unusual approach to fashion:

The bags we are told women are buying in their zillions, cost more than feeding a baby for a year. Or a complete household depending on your lack of taste. Now, I have been known to stroke a Mulberry bag longingly. I am not completely immune to loveliness and I admire craftsmanship.

And I like their messenger bags (intended for men) precisely because they are made fit for purpose, are low key and avoid being swaddled in painful buckles or slathered in eye watering pink patent leather. The cost, although BIG treat time, could not feed the five thousand.

3. The Monkey with a Blue Rosette has a spot of bother:

Last weekend, in Barmpotsby, Yorkshire, one of my campaign team, Johan, made a comment about the case of the teacher Gillian Gibbons, who was jailed in Sudan for calling a teddy bear Mohammed.

Whilst helping me canvassing, he spoke about the case and said to a voter on the doorstep: "It's the first time that anyone's ever called for the early release of a Scouser from prison."

4. Finally, the Fake Consultant discusses an issue close to my heart:

My current snow shovel is my favorite ever: about a foot wide (30cm), thick, plastic (aluminum shovels always seem to bend at the corners or the rivets fail-I hate that), and able to easily slide, even full of the heaviest snow.

The less you lift the better in this job, so sliding the full shovel as much as possible is a good thing. Of course, at some point you still have to lift the snow to remove it, but as of now that’s not a big problem.

After half an hour or so a good third of the work is done; and it’s time for a break. The snow is still powdery, and it’s changing from big, fluffy flakes to an icier, more granular flake. Not an ice pellet...but instead more like the difference between sorbet and granite. Still 26-28 degreesF.

[citizens juries] reflective but not representative

James Barlow, Constituency Chairman for the Conservative Party in the three-way marginal Bristol-West seat, was writing about what would presumably be the ultra-boring subject of local recycling and landfill but it turned out to be anything but boring.

The moment he touched on Citizens Juries, danger signals abounded:

Now my party colleagues in the Conservative Group of the council have taken an active part in this process - John Goulandris as Chair of the OSM committee, and Richard Eddy as Chair of the Quality of Life Scrutiny committee.

But I'm concerned that the Jury process is misleading us all. I suspect that it removes the impetus for oversight of Council policy by the opposition party, and it creates an illusion of impartiality and "judicial" deliberation when it's really just a rubber stamp on existing policy - i.e. it ain't a Jury.

As another UK user of Citizens' Juries comments on their website :

"[It c]an be difficult to 'reject' the Jury's recommendations"

In our city, a Citizens' Jury is constructed as an off-shoot of the Citizens' Panel ("Bristol's Biggest Think Tank") which consists of two thousand local residents, some randomly selected, some self-selected.

For the randomly selected, a London firm supplies the questionnaire:

The on-street recruitment questionnaire (Appendix 5 of the latest Jury's report) is less intrusive than that of the Citizens' Panel, but also fails to check whether the respondent is a Bristol Council Tax payer. It also mispells "Cotham" as "Cotam", and indicates that Cabot is a ward in both Central West and Central East Bristol, but I suppose that's to be expected from a London-based market research firm .

If you like, you can apply to join the Citizens' Panel, for which you will be asked your ethnicity, sexual orientation and whether you consider yourself to be transgendered, but not whether you are a council tax payer in Bristol.

But:

...half the jurors are recruited from the existing membership of the Citizens' Panel, and the other half by on-street recruitment...

James comments on its purpose in giving feedback, which it certainly does, but then:

I'm slightly more sceptical of some of the other aspirations for the Panel -

"[to contribute] to democratic renewal and [to encourage] participation in democratic processes"

I thought that was achieved by voting, and doesn't seem to be compatible with the stated utility of the panel "as a vehicle for developing public relations". You can petition the electorate, or persuade the electorate. Doing both at exactly the same time seems a tricky proposition.

So, is this Citizens Jury a legitimate representative body?

The jurors are recruited to be a cross-section of the community: the Jury is said to ‘reflect’ the local population, rather than to ‘represent’ it.

In other words, recommending policy without being elected but with the virtual guarantee of recommnedations being adopted - and leading this process are "facilitators":

The role of the facilitators is to enable the jury to complete its task, not to lead the discussion in any particular direction.

Officially. But the facilitators are also charged with this task [taken from N10's guidelines for the Nine Regional Focus Groups, i.e. the EU concept of regions]:

"Participants will be given facts and figures that are independently verified, they can look at real issues and solutions, just as a jury examines a case. And where these citizens juries are held the intention is to bring people together to explore where common ground exists."

Independently verified by whom? By "experts" approved by the ODPM from whence came Julia Middleton [there are various links halfway down this post on her organization].

Now if you explore CP's training of "facilitators", assuming this is from where they received their training, snippets emerge. Candidates are trained to lead beyond authority, to seize an issue and lead in it, that is, to become facilitators.

And the skill in this is to be able to persuade without coercing, to leave participants feeling that the three-card trick was actually democratically arrived at and government can then point to a democratically arrived at decision.

One of the central motifs in the whole EU drive is "legitimacy".

This is why Lisbon was, why the referenda were, why Brown won't put a referendum on the EU to the British electorate. It's not correct that Westminster acts lawlessly - they are obsessed with being able to claim they acted lawfully.

Hang on a minute - why would a government need to spend
"£45,000 to run the jury", muliplied by however many Citizen Panels there are [by page 10 of Google, they're still being listed]? Why the expense?

The illusion of legitimacy.

Now look at the whole mechanism. There is a group of approved citizens who, for a start, have been raised above the common throng to oversee local government policy, traditionally the preserve of councils. But councils are corrupt, incompetent, in thrall to paymasters and political parties, aren't they?

So The Select Body of Citizens feels it's doing important work and that government will listen to their recommendations. Hell, isn't that what we're all going on about - government listening? And they do listen - to the decision the facilitator is able to get out of the forum.

The leader poses questions, people respond, the recalcitrant or obstinate objector is bypassed and the decision is arrived at.
Any trained teacher could tell you about this technique and as a former Head, I was on my guard against it - the others are tacitly encouraged, by raised eyebrow or other non-verbal expression, to either approve or disapprove and always there is the desire to please by the honoured citizen who, don't forget, has already been preselected.

But what if the citizen selection process didn't completely work, what if someone has the temerity to ask: "What is your legitimacy?"

Here is an example of this occurring.
John Trenchard mentioned Englisc Fyrd, who quoted:

And yet another blog has noticed CP. This speech by CP head honcho Julia Middleton. And I quote:
No region and no part and no part of any country are ever going to go anywhere until it manages to engage the talented.
and:
The other day I was in a meeting in Belfast, I have no idea how I ended up in this meeting. It was a really wonderful meeting with about fifteen people there. When we were really getting going there was this little jerk in the corner, who kept piping out “What is your legitimacy?” and we all said “just shut up” and we kept on going.
and:
Anyway, he went on and on about our legitimacy to such an extent that in the end I turned to him and said “Let me just be absolutely clear that at this meeting we are not trying to allocate any public funding, nor are we trying to make any public policy.Actually in this meeting are the fifteen people that are the only people in Northern Ireland that have done anything for the homeless in Northern Ireland for the last 10 years. That is our legitimacy and it is a totally compelling and overwhelming legitimacy”.
Note the sleight of hand - the legitimacy question wasn't directed at the 15 people. It was directed at Julia Middleton and Common Purpose. Note the disdain for dissent - "just shut up", "jerk". That says a lot.

and then the anti-democratic agenda stall is laid out:
I believe with a passion that there is a democratic space. There is an enormous space in it for politicians. They call the shots. They are accountable. That is right and proper. But there is another space for leaders of civil society.

Coming back to James' verbatim text of the process on waste recycling in Bristol - read through it and make up your own mind about how far this discussion was "not led".

Citizens Connect is different and yet along the same lines, in this case citizens connecting directly with the government electronically but not face to face [Micro-Control 7], on whom Englisc Fyrd writes, [when looking at the Dome question]:


But with millions pouring down the drain (well into a few people's pockets) an attempted diamond heist and daily financial craziness at the Dome, no one really noticed anything unusual when Camelot, whoever runs Common Purpose and Lord Falconer gave £2 million to Common Purpose to run a web site which links to the governments' sites, which is all Citizen's Connection is.

This is the government's thrust - circumventing the elected channels within the UK. Brown's own speech included:

So the citizens jury on crime will look at how we can empower people in their neighbourhoods to work with the police and other agencies to tackle crime and anti-social behaviour.

and:

It is a politics of common purpose, because our country is built on the fairness of the British people.

So, the juries produce "recommendations", of which James notes that there is a history of Jury recommendations being quite coercive on policy formulation [supported within the full text of Brown's speech] and not simply advisory. James further notes:

The whole terminology of "jury" and "witnesses" is misleading, as this is not really an antagonistic process. There is no judge, no prosecution or defence, but rather an agenda to be agreed. In fact the use of the trapping of a proper jury are just theatre to mask the manipulative nature of the exercise.

There was a similar process, sometime earlier, when the leading figures in the Scottish Arts were led in a "debate" which was not a debate:

After an obviously unwanted debate (chaired by Mrs. Jack McConnell, Labour Party) in which the audience clearly did not accept what they were told, the final words from Seona Reid (then Director of the SAC) conveyed the impression that some form of transaction had taken place, that "SAC was working to ensure the arts were incorporated into the range of Government policies - but arts organisations and artists needed to play their part in making this a reality".

So let's summarize. The ODPM trains pre-existing "facilitators" and from whence are they drawn? Well, you tell me - where would you expect such leadership to come from?

"Would an organization of such magnitude as Common Purpose, whose whole purpose is to have people in place in all regions of the EU-UK for the purpose of "leading beyond authority" and given the government's own first thrust into regional assemblies which was soundly defeated, would CP stand back from these Citizen's Juries and play no leadership role whatever?"

There's a little matter they seem to have forgotten though, as James notes:

But hold on a minute - this is essentially what Councillors are supposed to do isn't it? Scrutiny of legislation and local service provision?

So James asks what such "Citizens' Juries'" prime directives really are:

Well let's look at the originators of the Citizens' Jury concept (and owners of the US trademark) - what do they have to say?

"Democracy is based on the idea that elected officials and public agencies carry out the will of the people. But the manipulative nature of our election campaigns and the great power of lobbyists make it doubtful that government policy is based upon the wishes of a well-informed and engaged public. Public opinion polls can tell what people quickly think in response to telephoned survey questions. The actual "will of the people" may be something quite different."

Let me have a go at translating that: The people (that's you and me) don't know what we want if you ask us, and we're easily swayed by slick election campaigns. In fact we need someone else to tell us what we really need.

But even beyond circumventing elected authorities, there has to be some further point to it. It has to be something more than just "legitimacy".

Helpful in understanding this is the Carpathian Foundation's tagline "five nations, one community" and that is an indicator or what is going on. With its "
Carpathian Cross-border European Citizens’ Panel", the purpose is clear - to empower sections of the citizenry, handpicked and vetted for affiliations, in the upper AB socio-economic groups, in geographical divisions which do not correspond to national boundaries.

That is - the EU is circumventing national and traditional local government to indirectly implement policy.

You might like to read the Micro-Control series on this blog through the search at the top left and it goes into aspects of Common Purpose's common purpose of setting up regional leadership under Westminster, which in turn has signed Lisbon and is firmly on the EU path, a point few dispute today.


The very first warning sign for me, in James' post, of the stink of CP was in the words:

"ethnicity, sexual orientation and whether you consider yourself to be transgendered".

Excuse me but how exactly do these details reflect on waste recycling in Bristol, a matter supposedly thrashed out in local council meetings?

Chair of New Deal for Community in Liverpool quoted the advice given to Franklyn D Roosevelt when he set up his own New Deal:

"Experience should teach us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the government's purposes are beneficial."

It's the process of diverting and hijacking the agenda of what began in a well meaning way, of harnessing a pre-existing desire in the community and giving it to them in your own way. The idea of citizens having a say is admirable.

But to implement it, it can only be done with government assistance and governments, especially of the Brown ilk, are not noted for divesting themselves of either power or funding unless there is a common purpose. A Roosevelt Justice, quoted from the same source above, said:

"The greater dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding."

Well meaning people are often naive [e.g. the development of the atom bomb] and this is the genesis of PC and from where the diversion and hijacking come. There are a great many out there less altruistic, less naive and all too willing to harness buzzwords to pursue entirely different agendas.