A prelimary North Wales Against Cuts [West] Meeting has been set up in Bangor to tag on to the end of a Peace & Justice Group meeting [there is no connection other than that many memebers of that group are interested and seems like a positive first step and decision made!].

Therefore, the meeting will be at 7.30pm at the Quaker Meeting House, Dean Street, Bangor on Monday 24th January [next week]. It will be a short meeting ending at about 8.15pm, so please come on time. [The QMH is just about opposite Dean Street chippy.]


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We can decide how we want to continue, and where and how often we want to meet in future at this first meeting.

Would be grand if you could come along – I have had a fair bit of interest and cross-over with other anti-cuts groups in the region, so it should be quite productive.
Jan Underwood

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Corker!

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Comic Greg McHugh’s Gary: Tank Commander has already won his hearts and minds campaign in Scotland. But he admits that he feared his hilarious East Coast corporal with a passion for cheesy pasta might be taken as an insult to the soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

He revealed yesterday, however, that everyone got the joke – not least the top brass at the Ministry of Defence. They’ve been helping with locations, personnel and equipment for the second series of the hit BBC show, which has just finished filming.

Greg, 30, said: “The Army is such a massive institution that across the board you will have people who love it, people who hate it and a massive middle ground.

“I don’t think everybody in the forces loves it but I think we would hear if they didn’t approve. The MoD response has been amazing. They have really encouraged us for the second series to use locations.

“Ultimately, what we’re doing is not about having a go at the military. We’re just looking at four guys who are in the Army and have a laugh.

“It’s at least refl ecting something other than the deaths of more soldiers or the political heat on the situation.

“Gary is a nonsense and hopefully they enjoy that.

In the first couple of minutes of the first episode of series two there is a joke about the Taliban not staying home, that would be the occupying soldiers thousands of miles from home joking about Afghans not staying indoors, but the gag is not in any sense aware of this irony. Gary is a somewhat endearing, camp, gormless soldier who is unclear of the difference between TV and reality, (he maintains Phil Mitchell is Ross Kemp’s brother, half at least). So it is perhaps not unexpected a similar approach to the subject matter is evidenced, McHugh both stars in and writes the show. It takes the piss out of officers, gently, they are poshboy chumps, however that doesn’t extend to seeing them order drone strikes on wedding parties. From the episode I have seen it stays in Army sets, no Afghan characters so far, positive or negative. It’s basically a rather suspect attempt by the eager to please BBC commissioners and the MOD to disinform perception of the war with a bumbling sitcom. This is essential for the establishment, not least as they are engaged in cynical deployment for economic and political reasons, war as job security. The evasion of incisive wit or satire makes it an ideal way to represent a contentious issue for a timid post-Hutton Auntie Beeb. However as the MOD are assisting in the show’s production things become somewhat more serious than merely an unspectacular sitcom, the absolute refusal to engage with the profound issues this brings up is what leaves a bad taste in the mouth. Endearing and bumbling fantasy, while a war machine shreds bodies in the real world is artistically moribund. McHugh’s got talent but the complexities of 21st century geopolitics, imperialism and wars of choice are not the ideal context for it. However I am willing to allow that by the end of the series it will have become a searing indictment of war and human folly.

Hmm, I suspect I might be expecting too much of TV.

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Footage of a Mayday protest attacked by riot police and water cannon in Dublin in 2008, undeterred the ruling class continued its frenzy and the country is now under deep Shock Doctrine measures that further make the people pay for the elite’s crimes. 2011 is the turning point year for the UK, we either stop the Austerity scam or in the future we will be reading Dickens novels as a picture of what life might be like… if it got better.

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[nb. It seems most people are ignorant of the assault being planned upon the most vulnerable groups in Britain, there will be homelessness, lives shortened and suicides more than ever before and it is not because 'there is no alternative' it is down to an ideological choice to make the poorest pay for the crimes of the richest. So that multimillionaires may keep their luxuries people will be murdered through government policy, it is that simple. Human history is unfortunately full of examples of the realisation of the atrocities always coming several years too late, what will be peoples' excuses this time? Or alternatively we could actually stop these ConDem wreckers this year.]

Guest Post by Sue Marsh who blogs at Diary of a Benefit Scrounger

Dear Mainstream Media

I’m mystified, totally puzzled.

I know there are lots of cuts happening all at once and group after group must be lobbying for column inches or news slots. Students, middle income child benefit recipients, housing benefit claimants frightened they are about to become homeless, nurses, fire fighters, police, local councils – we all want you to take our cause to heart, to tell people what is really happening on our behalf.

Students have marched, with youth and vitality and could presumably do so until 2015. The broadsheets were falling over themselves to tell the higher rate tax paying, cornflake-munching- commuters of Britain just how much they stand to lose in child benefit. (£1,055 per year for the first child, £696.80 for each additional child). You’ve made sure that most of us know how many police officers we could lose or how pay freezes faced by nurses will add up.

But there is a group who might as well not exist. The newspapers rarely write about us, (unless it is to demonise or deny us with Daily Mail Group hyperbole) the TV stations turn a blind eye – there is not even a political party prepared to stand up for us. We have no-one but ourselves, yet our voices are probably the weakest in society. Most of us can’t physically march, some can’t even speak at all and others don’t know what is being done to them. We have no networks of influential contacts, most can’t attend rallies or flash-mobs.

Sick and Disabled people are now facing cuts of up to a third in their incomes. Since George Osborne’s Comprehensive Spending Review last October, there has been a steady drip-drip of almost daily announcements that have stripped away decades of hard-fought dignity in just a few short months.

-Employment Support Allowance (ESA) will now be time limited to 1 year (Cost : £4752.80 pa)
-2.27 Million of the 2.5 million claiming ESA will now be considered fit for work (91%)
-Up to 750,000 of the most profoundly disabled who claim DLA will also be found fit and have their benefits stopped (25%)
-Benefit rates have been frozen (Potential loss of up to 15% of income over 5 yr parliament)
-Housing benefit caps will make many disabled people homeless
-Work support schemes are being scrapped at a time when unemployment is already creeping towards 3 million. The “Access to Work” programme will be scrapped, which helped small and medium sized businesses adapt premises, job centres face cuts and a private, American firm (ATOS) have been given an almost total monopoly in forcing us into work, paid commission for each “success”
-Local councils face cuts so vast (27% over 5 yr parliament) that they have already started to cut vital support services – pulling funding for hospices, axing specialist school provision, closing hospital wards, cutting care packages – the list goes on and on. This article might help to put things into perspective http://diaryofabenefitscrounger.blogspot.com/2011/01/nowhere-to-turn-for-vulnerable.html

-Disability Living Allowance is to be scrapped and replaced, whilst adults needing full time residential care and children in hospital will have the basic right of mobility taken away from them, with the scrapping of mobility payments for these groups.

These are not people with a little twinge here and there. A few headaches or a sore finger. They are the Mum with breast cancer or teenager with heart disease. They are our sons with leukaemia or our profoundly disabled sister with muscular dystrophy. They are the college friend who broke his spine in the army or the lover who nearly drowned on holiday and was left brain damaged. The wife or the daughter or the nan who used to run marathons, now fighting for every agonised breath from lung disease.

Most aren’t born sick. The odd headache or a twinge in the chest becomes a tumour or a blood clot and life changes forever. That Thursday morning doctor’s appointment stops the world from turning and the blood runs cold in your veins. Most face disability in a heartbeat as their car flips into a ditch or their ski comes loose. Lawyers and bankers and producers and columnists don’t have a special immunity gene. Their spines crush and their previously taken-for-granted bodies let them down just as easily as those of cleaners or shop-assistants. This is the most important issue any of us will face – and we will face it. One in three will develop some kind of cancer, over 10 million in the UK suffer from a disability or chronic illness.

In exactly one month, DLA is due to be slashed by parliament. By the 14th February, if sickness or disability come for you or your loved ones, (and sadly, the statistics are that one day, in some form, they will) you may find that all those NI payments and tax contributions have been for nothing. You may find yourself totally dependent on a partner financially, unable to get treatment, care or equipment to make your already unrecognisable life liveable. If you have no partner, you may find yourself in abject poverty, or even homeless as you try to face the un-faceable. If your soft and perfect new baby turns out to be autistic or dying, you may have to helplessly watch them die. If you think this is dramatic or overly emotional, actually it probably isn’t dramatic enough. I have one month to make you aware of what your future could hold.

Today, we use the only tool we have – the blogosphere. Happily, the internet is awash with eloquence, passion and determination. Bloggers all over the web have agreed to write about this today. The hashtag #ombh will be used on Twitter to bring these articles together. Wherever you look, I hope you read stories like this. You can help by posting this and articles like it (see http://thebrokenofbritain.blogspot.com ) on Facebook, websites and Twitter, by calling radio phone-ins and writing to your MP (a template letter will be available at Broken of Britain too) Sign petitions, tell your friends, write to the papers. You can use the “One Month Before Heartbreak” picture at the top of my site as your avatar or you can blog yourself.

Just help. Please. Before you realise that we were right, but we couldn’t change things in time to save your Mum or your wife or your son.

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Hugh Laurie would have been an excellent Bond…

(Handy script site here)

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Off the top of my head based on what is being said:-

Turning online into offline activity, linking blogs with local grass roots groups.

Online activism by the housebound: As Broken of Britain shows there is a pool of talent online that also represents people who could be the worst hit by the Coalition’s Shock Doctrine. A Broken of Britain workshop/session should be a definite.

Flowing from that there seems to be (to put it roughly and broadly) skepticism from long time left campaigners of Netroots and their politics ( I can see how when we had a New Labour govt. Tory blogs bloomed and now Labour wants the same thing, but is it a Labour still packed with Blairite centrists/Neoliberals who want to slant the online terrain in their favour?). Also skepticism that online activism has much worth, but you know firstly online can sometimes be all people can do, because of time, work or health issues, secondly it does create networks and does increase the general level of activism in both spheres I would argue. And teenagers & tweenagers are far more online by hook or by crook, if online territory is conceded to the right, if the net is a corporate run Sky like set of pay for channels and Net Neutrality a distant relic it will be even harder to make your case.

There is also the ‘Digital Divide’, poor people have less access to computers and the net. This will also inevitably affect the subjects for discussion and campaigning online. Certainly wonky or topical issue arguments gain more audience than pointing out thousands are about to be made homeless and what can be done. I also suppose some people whose personal circumstances are relatively secure can enjoy a good argument/debate and that pushes out discussion of pressing violent deprivation of thousands if not millions of people.

Politics is maybe easier to talk about online than off, I know I’ve wondered how the hell to have a conversation with someone who’s just put down their copy of The Sun & moaned about immigrants and scroungers, a workshop on how to engage in real world without getting to confrontational impasse would be handy.

I think all of Luna 17′s comments are fair in Netroots UK and the limits of ‘online activism’ but seeing online as having limits is back to an online/offline antagonism, both have things they cannot do, but both have qualities the other does not possess. Don’t see limits, see how they complement each other, adapt and overcome.

This is just thinking out loud, rather than take Netroots as written in stone I think it should be taken as an evolutionary project that will play a role in opposing the Coalition and figure some plans for the future. If you don’t like it, help to change it, I don’t want the conspicuous online ‘Left’ to be a soft centrist institutionalised globule pimped into supporting uncritically whatever Labour does. But it also has to something that to the casual unsuspecting surfer is interesting and welcoming and has a positive hopeful message that cuts and the profit motive are not all there is to human existence, that there is an alternative that works.

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