The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Daily Archives: June 17, 2017
The Most Intimate Symbol: Jan Swafford on Classical Music – lareviewofbooks
Posted: June 17, 2017 at 2:06 pm
JUNE 17, 2017
THE MASSACHUSETTS-BASED writer, teacher, and composer Jan Swafford is famed for his biographies of Beethoven, Brahms, and Charles Ives, as well as his beloved Vintage Guide to Classical Music. Basic Books has just published Language of the Spirit: An Introduction to Classical Music, a clear and lively book that does exactly what it promises, in a series of chapters built on historical periods and individual composers.
The following interview was conducted over email, shortly after Language of the Spirit was released.
SCOTT TIMBERG: There have been, over the decades, numerous tomes on classical music. What kind of gap does yours fill?
JAN SWAFFORD: My old Vintage Guide was aimed at adult music lovers or potential ones, and also at schools. Language of the Spirit is mainly aimed at schools, secondly at adults. I imagine there have always been books for music classes the old Joseph Machlis book, The Enjoyment of Music, went through several editions and, modified by other hands, is still around. Aaron Copland did his bit with What to Listen for in Music. I wanted to write a similarkind of thing in a more lively, humanistic, and entertaining way. At the same time, the book is written by a practicing musician and composer who looks at the profession from the inside. My basic assumption is that this music is not some grand abstraction, not an adjunct to a lifestyle, but a special and profound kind of communication among people; its main impact is not intellectual but emotional. If the book has a central message, I suppose thats it.
Decades ago, books, courses, and television programs on serious music, visual art, and the like were plentiful Leonard Bernsteins Young Peoples Concerts, Kenneth Clarks Civilisation, and so on. Has that approach dropped out of the mainstream in a world of postmodern niches, the demotion of high culture, and constant digital connection?
Ill reply with a story. My mother was a high school English teacher much involved with poetry and literature. When I was cleaning out the house after she died, I found stacks of articles on major literary figures Eliot, Frost, et al that were mostly torn out of Life and Time magazines, which, at the time, were enormously popular, omnipresent. Every week Time had a classical music piece. People like Hemingway and Eliot were regularly on the cover. Whats on the coverof magazines in print and online these days? Rock stars and movie stars. TV began in the 50s with vastly ambitious ideas about public education featuring people like Bernstein on the networks, before public television. Clark was later, on the BBC and PBS, but PBS doesnt really do things of that scope anymore. The reasons are obvious, all having to do with money.
So yeah, theres been a gigantic dumbing-down of the culture. In the United States, its moving toward the point where pop culture may be the only culture left, with everything else having to suck up to it. I think thats a bad situation, obviously. On the other side of the coin, orchestras still exist, even if they arent exactly thriving (partly because the players are getting paid better). But theyre still there. Mozart still sells out Boston Symphony Hall, there are hundreds of chamber concerts, and millions are listening to classical music on Spotify and YouTube, in unpredictable ways. Classical music is a lousy profession, but it always has been. And it has always needed some kind of subsidy to exist just like railroads.
Can you tell us about a composer who demonstrated not just a long, but a protean, multichaptered career, on the order of a Miles Davis or Bob Dylan? What personal talents and social conditions made that possible?
Somebody who had a long, strongcareer, from beginning to end Certainly Ives was multichaptered and protean, but he was largely felled by illness in his 40s. Saint-Sans was a prodigy who had a gigantic career born in 1835 and died in 1921 and I think he wrote books on science, but he was basically a brilliant second-rater. I guess the best answer is Schoenberg and Stravinsky, who both got started early, were prolific through long lives, and went through significant evolutions within them. And they both wrote first-rate stuff into old age. But maybe the champ was Bach, brilliant from his teens, writing lasting work from his early 20s, and ending with his most profound music the B-minor Mass and Art of Fugue.
By contrast, is there a major composer with a very brief heyday not someone who died young like Schubert, but someone whose genius seemed to come and go quite quickly? What happened to him?
I wonder whether the answer here isnt Mendelssohn, who wrote some of his best music in his teens and, from that point, gradually ran out of inspiration until his death, mostly from overwork, at 38.
From your perch amid the ancient forests and verdant river valleys of New England, how vital does the classical music in Southern California and on the West Coast seem in the 21st century?
Dont know much about the SoCal scene, except that I had a gig with the LA Phil last year and they sounded splendid. I dont actually, as it were, like Disney Hall, or any other Gehry, but the Halls acoustics are fabulous. And there were good crowds for the all-Beethoven series. Besides that, Disney Hall began a massive upscaling of the neighborhood around it, which Im told was a dump but now has museums, schools, restaurants, et cetera.
Your writing is known for the parallels you draw between classical music and other fields, especially art, architecture, and intellectual history. Why do you find these metaphors useful?
Theyre not metaphors to me theyre direct connections. I believe theres such a thing as a zeitgeist, which is a matter of something in the air that affects everybody, and artists in whatever discipline are part of the zeitgeist. Im not particularly mystical about it, but a time has a character. Freud influenced everything, helped create the Austro-German fin-de-sicle zeitgeist, even for the people who never read him. I think Faulkner was influenced by Einsteinian relativity, though he could not have read Einstein, and by Freud, though he never read Freud.
In my early 20s, I imagined a choral piece based on vowels and their connection to the names of gods which came to pass, not in a piece of mine but in Karlheinz Stockhausens Stimmung, which Id never heard. It was an idea in the air. So again, the connections between the arts and intellectual and political and religious history are real, not metaphorical. Art comes from life and returns to life, and music is no exception.
In your teaching and dealing with civilians, does there seem to be a composer or historical period that serves as a gateway drug to the larger world of classical music?
No. I tend to pick out irresistible works from any period and play those everything from Carissimis Jephte to Bachs Sheep May Safely Graze to Mozarts Elvira Madigan slow movement to Mussorgskys Great Gate of Kiev to The Rite of Spring to Ivess Psalm 67.
What writers on music, or on the arts in general, do you admire and suspect may have shaped your style and approach?
When I was first doing music journalism I primed myself with G. B. Shaws music criticism, which is the best inspiration I know. Hes the main reason I cant call myself the best music writer in English. (There are other reasons.) At the moment I cant think of much else. And when Id developed a voice as a writer, I didnt need to read Shaw anymore.
I read a lot of James Agees film criticism, too, which helped: The picture deserves, like four out of five other movies, to walk alone, tinkle a little bell, and cry Unclean, Unclean. Agee showed me the value of a zinger line. Likewise, Anthony Lane. The best zinger I know is from Thoreau: The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation. That line went through some eight drafts, all of which said the same thing, but only of them said it for the ages.
Is there a composer or piece that, rather than growing stale or familiar over the decades, retains and deepens its fascination?
My first choice is Bachs B-minor Mass, because, for about 50 years, Ive found it incomparable from beginning to end. Meanwhile, as these things do, its changed for me as Ive changed. Also the Beethoven Missa solemnis, which I first got to know in high school (maybe the first score I ever owned), and is enormously complex and multifaceted, hard to take in at first, but sublime when youve managed to get a handle on it. Ivess Fourth Symphony fascinated me from the beginning and has only grown since (while Ive burned out on some other Ives pieces).
Lets start where it all began, with the origins of music: What does it tell us that every human society, past and present, East and West, has some kind of music? (And most, I think, use something resembling the pentatonic scale.) Do you have any hunches as to why this practice, which has no clear evolutionary or territorial benefit, would arise and persist?
As Ive said in print, I think humans are innately musical, and that music evolved with us, alongside language and at first there may have been little difference between music and words and religion. But as I also write, single-celled animals respond to sound, so the idea that sound in itself is meaningful begins at the cellular level, and, from there, goes up to the highest brain functions. And also heart and soul functions. Its built into us.
If Susanne Langer is right, symbolic responses are built into us too, so we innately respond to all sound, including music, as if it were a symbol of something. That means, among other things, that instrumental music, without words, is the most intimate and personal kind of symbol, because what you bring to it is what you, in particular, are. Thats true of all art, but I think more so of abstract music, which we dont perceive as abstract at all.
Scott Timberg is the editor of The Misread City: New Literary Los Angeles and author of Culture Crash: The Killing of the Creative Class.
The rest is here:
The Most Intimate Symbol: Jan Swafford on Classical Music - lareviewofbooks
Posted in Zeitgeist Movement
Comments Off on The Most Intimate Symbol: Jan Swafford on Classical Music – lareviewofbooks
Summit County leaders pass resolution supporting public lands and national monuments – The Park Record
Posted: at 2:05 pm
Wednesday, Summit County Council members agreed to join Salt Lake City and Castle Valley in passing a resolution urging Utah Gov. Gary Herbert and state legislators to stop using taxpayers' money to fund the transfer of control of public lands to the state.
The council unanimously approved the resolution, which recognizes the "value of federal public lands to Summit County's economy, recreation, heritage and quality of life." Nine people cheered and applauded the decision, including Becky Yih, a Kimball Junction-area resident and volunteer with the campaign "Keep Public Lands in Public Hands."
"It's a statement in favor of preserving the land as it is and listening to the native voices," Yih said. "I think it will bolster efforts in other areas and might trigger other cities and counties to take the same stance."
The resolution states that any loss of access to public lands would have "damaging consequences" for the county's economy, residents and visitors. Additionally, the resolution stresses how the transfer of the county's federal lands would undermine the county's ongoing investment in its open space programs.
"I want to remind you that of all the communication you have received is in support of this resolution and opposed to the transfer of public lands to the state," said Janna Young, director of intergovernmental affairs.
As part of the resolution, the county offered its support for the continued designation of the state's national monuments, including Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante.
"Summit County has a rich history of multiple use of public lands in support of an agricultural-and natural resource-based economy and more recently, a significant recreation-focused economy," the resolution stated. "Since 1998, the travel and tourism sector has steadily held approximately half of the countys total private employment and a significant portion of Summit Countys economic livelihood rests on having an active and desirable natural resources, recreation and tourism industry."
Yih said she became involved in the public lands discussion in 2016 after several state legislators wrote a column for the Salt Lake Tribune explaining their reasons for wanting to return control of federal lands to the state.
"They didn't say anything about recreation or the value of public lands. They said it is to develop commerce and that totally incensed me," Yih said. "Senators Orrin Hatch and Mike Lee don't represent me. But, I think, by the Summit County Council being willing to stand up for this, they are representing me and the rest of us who value these lands."
Yih further commended the County Council's consideration of pulling out of U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop (R-Utah) public lands initiative, which has been heavily criticized by the groups who oppose the transfer of public lands. County Council members have not decided whether they want to maintain the county's involvement with the bill or pursue a separate piece of legislation, which will include Wednesday's resolution.
"The county had already tried to work with Rob Bishop and just say, 'OK we can give a little here if you'll give a little,' which he didn't," Yih said. "But by getting a group of entities to make a resolution similar to this, it at least lets the state know they will receive some pushback on the $14 million lawsuit and Public Lands Initiative."
County Council member Kim Carson said councilors had received approximately 75 emails supporting the resolution prior to the meeting.
"I just want to thank you for your input and thank everyone who sent in comments," Carson said.
To view the resolution, go to http://summitcounty.org/DocumentCenter/View/5697.
Read the original post:
Posted in Resource Based Economy
Comments Off on Summit County leaders pass resolution supporting public lands and national monuments – The Park Record
Take Your Business to the Next Level with Marketing Automation Software – Small Business Trends
Posted: at 2:04 pm
Marketing your small business, whether online or off, is a time intensive process. As your business grows, managinglead capture, nurturing, converting and relationship management become too big to handle manually, which is why small business owners turn to marketing automation software to managethe load.
In general, automationbrings many benefits to your small business including:
However, because the promotion, selling, and relationship management processes involve so many steps, manyof which arerepeated for each customer, marketing isparticularly suited to automation. And thats where marketing automation software comes in.
Happily, there are many marketing automation software options for small businesses. These solutionscan handle a few, or alltypes, ofautomated marketing techniques. In other words, they include various automation features such as:
Note:Not all solutions offer every feature.
While you may be hesitantto try one becauseofeither cost orlearning curve, you should be aware that many marketing automation software vendors:
Are you considering marketing automation for your small business? If so, heres a list of marketing automation software solutions to consider.
GetResponsecalls itself the all-in-one online marketing platform to grow your business and a look down the features on their home page shows just how complete the software is.
While its oneof the most affordable solutions on this list,GetResponse brings the same, if not more,of the features and functionalityoffered by the more expensive solutions on this list. That said, the price doesincrease with use, but a small business should be able to handle the increase as it grows.
Another affordable solution, ActiveCampaign,offers everything a small business needs to automate its marketing efforts including a robust, built-in CRM system.
Calling itself a small business CRM, GreenRope is almost a small business management suite. Starting withmarketing automation, youll find website tracking, landing pages and more in this affordably-pricedsolution.
GreenRopealso offers sales and operations functionality setting the tool apart.
One of the more well-known marketing automation software options, Infusionsoftoffers everything your small business needs at a reasonable price.One feature that shows off the power of this solution is the flexibility of the campaign builder. This tool enables you to create elaborate workflows one timeand then implement them again and again. These workflows can include many types of steps including eCommerce, appointments, behaviors and actions, webinar attendance and many more.
Additional Resources
The only tool on the list to offer a website builder, HubSpot aims to integrateyour entire marketing effort in one place. One of the more powerful features of the tool is the ability to personalize your website with smart content based on a number of factors:
Additional Resources
Act-Onoffers arobust marketing automation platform.The software offers automation workflows and triggers as well as website behavior tracking, integration with many popular CRM platforms, and more.
One of the moreinteresting, and useful, featuresof Act-On is its funnel reporting. By setting up a sales funnel, you can track the effectiveness of your overall marketing efforts. Heres a sample:
AdditionalResources
Marketo offers a powerful solution with many features. One thing that stood out however was theircustomizedproduct bundling, an approach that may makethe tool attractive for small businesses that want to dip their toe in the water.
One of the most interestingaspects of Autopilot is the number of integrations it enables you to use as part of your marketing automation workflows. For example, below you can seethat the bottom right step sends an automated Slack message:
In addition, the vendor offers multi-channel marketing via emails, headsups (little pop-upnotifications) SMS messages, and even postcards. Finally, the pricing for this solution is low and scales as your business grows.
Salesfusion is a heavily-loaded marketing automation toolthat can help you take your small business to a new level. One standout feature? Its SEO audit featurethat helps improve your search engine rankings.
In addition to its marketing automation features, SharpSpring offers additional features includinga blog builderandVisitorID tool which attempts to identify anonymous visitors to your website.
Also, the vendor enables you to use your buyer personas to automatically offer unique, targeted content by segmenting your customers based on how closely their profiles match.
Additional Resources
While a look at SALESmanagos home page may make you run, dont let the complexity of the vendors offerings chase you away. This solution literally has it all and, if thats what you need, then its certainly worth a look.
No matter whichmarketing automation software solution you select, make sure youre getting the most out of the tool. And remember, you can automate processes beyond marketing, too, so besure to consider how leveraging other tools can helpstreamline your small business.
Automated Marketing Photo via Shutterstock
More:
Take Your Business to the Next Level with Marketing Automation Software - Small Business Trends
Posted in Automation
Comments Off on Take Your Business to the Next Level with Marketing Automation Software – Small Business Trends
Nokia’s Software is Key to Insight-Driven Automated Networking – SDxCentral
Posted: at 2:04 pm
SAN FRANCISCO Nokias new super-fast chipgot all the love at the companys swanky unveiling event in San Francisco this week. The company said its FP4 silicon-based routers will power the IP networks of the future. But reaching the target fully automated networking requires powerful software.
These routers will provide a high-performance network platform, which when combined withNokias Deepfield big-data analyticsand automation with ourSDN [software-defined networking] solutions will deliver to the vision of insight-driven automated networking, wrote Nokia VP Manish Gulyani on a Nokia blog the day after the event.
Nokias not there yet. Were in the process, of automated networking, said Steve Vogelsang, CTO for Nokias IP and optical business. The companys software innovations will move networks closer to self-driving status, he said.
We have the SDN control layer so we can drive changes into the network, but now there are still human beings on top of that, Vogelsang said. We havent connected it to the analytics. The first step is to get better at the analytics.
Security automation will likely happen quicker than overall network automation. This is where Deepfields technology fits in by automating the process of looking for anomalies. In DDoS [distributed denial of service] you dont have time for a human to interact and thats why weve spent a lot of money with Deepfield, making sure we minimize false positives, Vogelsang said.
Nokia acquired Deepfield earlier this year. The analytics software startup mapped billions of IP addresses, with the insight put into a database called Cloud Genome. It also collects network telemetry from routers.
This information can be used to provide network insights and prevent DDoS attacks.
We patented technology that goes out and actually builds maps of the entire Internet at scale, every day, all day, explained Craig Labovitz, GM of Nokia Deepfield. We combine that with data, with visibility into where the traffic is going, and where the traffic has come from. All of this is being done in software, at scale, in the network.
This enables real-time security as it provides instant knowledge of every application on the network.
It also helps avoid false positives these occur when DDoS prevention software detects a surge in Internet traffic and wrongly thinks its an attack. Deepfields maps of the Internet help it determine if the surge is a legitimate increase in traffic or an actual DDoS attack.
Security is really about who has the best data? Who has the best data to address false positives? Can you discriminate the attackers from the legitimate traffic?, Labovitz said. With cloud and theInternet of Things (IoT) fueling major DDoS attacks, security cant be an afterthought, he added. Security is an integral part to the next-generation network.
Nokias Network Services Platform is its SDN platform for carriers. It allows operators to automate network services across multiple network layers, both on-premise and in the cloud. It also works with equipment from multiple vendors.
It is really unleashing the ability for full centralized control of the whole network, said Sasa Nijemcevic, VP and GM for network and service management at Nokia. A product like Deepfield adds another dimension to this story. We believe that most of the building blocks to achieve that automation of the network are there.
ACG Research analyst Stephen Collins uses a slide (below) to show how the software and hardware work together to automate the network.
The FP4 chip generates the network telemetry data to provide real-time visibility into packet flows, he wrote in an email. The Deepfield software handles the big data analytics and is a key part of the complete solution for generating the intelligence (insights) that closes the feedback loop for the orchestration software, which in Nokias world is the NSP network services platform.
The next-step is identifying use cases for automated networking, such as using Deepfield software to automate the process of looking for anomalies, ACG Research analyst and CEO Ray Mota said. Nokias top SDN vendor status means service providers trust the company to run the brains of the network, Mota added.
By having the credibility of becoming an incumbent, Nokia is getting the credibility to start setting the framework for automation, Mota said. You use the term self-driving car Im not going to get in a car and take my hands off the wheel thats automated from a vendor I dont trust.
Photo: Basil Alwan, president, IP/Optical Networks at Nokia, announces the newFP4 chip.
Jessica is a Senior Editor, covering next-generation data centers and security, at SDxCentral. She has worked as an editor and reporter for more than 15 years at a number of B2B publications including Environmental Leader, Energy Manager Today, Solar Novus Today and Silicon Valley Business Journal. Jessica is based in the Silicon Valley.
View original post here:
Nokia's Software is Key to Insight-Driven Automated Networking - SDxCentral
Posted in Automation
Comments Off on Nokia’s Software is Key to Insight-Driven Automated Networking – SDxCentral
Rockwell Automation CEO shares workforce development strategies at White House – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Posted: at 2:04 pm
Subscribe today for full access on your desktop, tablet, and mobile device.
61
Let friends in your social network know what you are reading about
Rockwell Automation President and Chief Executive Officer Blake Moret shared his companys successful workforce development strategies at a roundtable discussion at the White House Wednesday.
Try Another
Audio CAPTCHA
Image CAPTCHA
Help
CancelSend
A link has been sent to your friend's email address.
A link has been posted to your Facebook feed.
Blake Moret (left) succeeded Keith Nosbusch (right) as the CEO of Rockwell Automation last year.(Photo: Business Wire)
Rockwell Automation President and Chief Executive Officer Blake Moret shared his companys successful workforce development strategies at a roundtable discussion at the White House Wednesday.
The conference was presented in conjunction with the Business Roundtable and was led by Ivanka Trump, daughter and adviser of President Donald Trump, and Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta.
Moret was one of about 20 CEOs who shared their workforce development success stories with the White House staff.
Reached by telephone after the conference, Moret said he shared three successful staff development strategies that Milwaukee-based Rockwell deploys: acommitment to lifelong learning;outcome-based instruction;and partnerships between manufacturers and learning centers, such as technical colleges.
I expressed the three principles for having a skilled workforce, Moret said. These are the things that work.
Moret said he was impressed by Ivanka Trumps interest in the subject.
She was an active participant and is clearly knowledgeable about the subject, Moret said.
Ivanka Trump and her father traveled Tuesday to Wisconsin, where they toured an apprenticeship program at Waukesha County Technical College.
The Business Roundtable is an association of chief executive officers of leading U.S. companies.
Read or Share this story: http://jsonl.in/2stJgbg
Read this article:
Posted in Automation
Comments Off on Rockwell Automation CEO shares workforce development strategies at White House – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Spain: The Municipal Network against Illegitimate Debt held a second successful meeting in Cadiz – CADTM.org
Posted: at 2:03 pm
The Municipal Network Against Illegitimate Debt and Fiscal Cuts is expanding to the level of the autonomous regions [the Spanish State consists of 12 autonomous communities, among which Andalusia, Catalonia, the Basque country, the Madrid community] stated Carmen Lizrraga, a Podemos member of the Parliament of Andalusia, at the opening press conference of the second meeting of the Network, which brought together in Cadiz, on 2, 3 and 4 June 2017, over 150 participants representing 77 municipalities from all over Spain. Members of the Parliaments of the autonomous Communities of Andalusia, Navarre, the Baleares, Estremadura and Galicia had a separate meeting that resulted in the decision to meet more frequently and in a more structured way after the summer recess.
Doing away with the illegitimate debt at the municipal, regional and national levels is part and parcel of the Network. The Oviedo Manifesto, which was signed by over one thousand elected representatives (among whom municipal councillors, MPs and MEPs, joined by social activists and international key figures) who committed to support the establishment of a Spanish association of municipalities, autonomous communities and nationalities that question illegitimate debt and work towards its abolition. The meeting in Cadiz was a step in that direction.
Thirteen municipalities and two autonomous parliaments subscribe to motions demanding remunicipalization
Over the last weeks, 13 municipalities that are members of the Network (Gijn, Laviana, Torres de la Alameda, Morn de la Frontera, Getxo, Vilassar de Mar, Santa Coloma de Gramanet, Loeches, Valdemoro, Amurrio, Jerez, Petrer and Leioa) voted motions against the Additional Provisions in the General State Budgets as presented by Finance Minister, Cristbal Montoro that prevent remunicipalization of services. A motion voted by the Parliament of Navarre and a proposal by the Parliament of Aragan were added to the municipalities protests.
Eric Toussaint, spokesperson for the Committee for the Abolition of Illegitimate Debts (CADTM), who took part in the meeting, said it was essential to now reach the level of involving autonomous Communities. If the network should stay at the municipal level without reaching out to the regions both in terms of political parties and of social movements, we would soon be in a dead-end. To achieve a solution we have to be able, and willing, to face up to the Central Government.
Similarly during the press conference Carlos Snchez Mato, in charge of economy and Finance for the city of Madrid, expressed the need to work together in a coordinated way otherwise there is no hope of winning.
Mato recalled the ground that had been covered between the Indignados movement in 2011 and the establishment of municipal governments aiming at change in about a hundred municipalities thanks to victories in the municipal elections in May 2015 and pointed out the difference between Cadiz run by Tefila Martnez (former PP mayoress) or by Kichi (the nickname given to the current Podemos party mayor - Por Cdiz S Se Puede), and indeed between Madrid run by Manuela Carmena (of the progressive coalition Ahora Madrid) or by Esperanza Aguirre (PP) the previous mayor. Wherever we are in positions of power we have to go beyond the legal framework. Madrid is fighting a hard battle against Montoro. We have to fight it and we shall win it. Because their unfair laws are ineffective to enforce their absurd measures.
Eric Toussaint underlined the significance of the Network, which is unprecedented whether in Spain or on the international scene. He added that the current challenge is to achieve the alchemy through which social movements and elected representatives join forces. Many of those representatives used to be active in the social movements. Another challenge he mentioned is for the front to tip the balance Balance End of year statement of a companys assets (what the company possesses) and liabilities (what it owes). In other words, the assets provide information about how the funds collected by the company have been used; and the liabilities, about the origins of those funds. of power with the government. It is one thing to be in the Madrid town hall confronting Montoro and another to be in one of the small municipalities under the threat of cuts such as in Puerto Real or Cadiz. Hence the need for a solidarity front.
In the opening session Ftima Pontones, in charge of the finance department for Puerto Real, a municipality currently caught in the vice of debt, exposed the perversion of a system that forbids direct employment but supports privatization of services. She called for disobedience on the part of citizens. She also criticized the ICO loans that turned a commercial debt into a financial debt and the obligation, through the modified article 135 of the Constitution to give payments to banks the first priority.
Maria Rozas, who is in charge of the Finance department for Santiago de Compostela, exposed the Montoro law as being more concerned with investors security than with the 26,000 people threatened by poverty in her city. She concluded on the necessity of standing up against the law and the investors.
Kichi launched a citizen audit of the debt in Cadiz
Other good news marked the beginning of this meeting in Cadiz, held in the wake of the meeting in Oviedo last November. The mayor of Cadiz, Jos Mara Gonzlez Kichi, announced that a citizen audit of the debt in Cadiz would start in September. One of its objectives is to show how public money is used. There is less waste when things are monitored he said. He was confident that collective learning is essential to avoid the mistakes of the past. Let us remember that in 2013, like many other municipalities, Cadiz contracted loans at 5.95% interest Interest An amount paid in remuneration of an investment or received by a lender. Interest is calculated on the amount of the capital invested or borrowed, the duration of the operation and the rate that has been set. rate while the banks granting those loans received the funds from the ECB ECB European Central Bank The European Central Bank is a European institution based in Frankfurt, founded in 1998, to which the countries of the Eurozone have transferred their monetary powers. Its official role is to ensure price stability by combating inflation within that Zone. Its three decision-making organs (the Executive Board, the Governing Council and the General Council) are composed of governors of the central banks of the member states and/or recognized specialists. According to its statutes, it is politically independent but it is directly influenced by the world of finance.
https://www.ecb.europa.eu/ecb/html/index.en.html at 0.25%.
The mayor of Cadiz gave another evidence of this commitment to citizen participation when he left the opening panel to join in a sit-in, in his childrens school, to defend public education. A clear wish to carry on this kind of networking resulted in the decision to hold a third meeting in Rivas Vaciamadrid, 15 kilometers from Madrid next November.
Translated by Mike Krolikowski and Christine Pagnoulle
View post:
Posted in Abolition Of Work
Comments Off on Spain: The Municipal Network against Illegitimate Debt held a second successful meeting in Cadiz – CADTM.org
Humanising hell – New Statesman
Posted: at 2:03 pm
This essay is based upon the One People Oration I delivered at Westminster Abbey in October 2014. I have made hundreds of speeches in the House of Commons as a Member of Parliament for 25 years, but this was the only one I had given in Westminster Abbey. In its early days, in the early1300s, Parliament actually sat there, in the Chapter House and then in the Refectory of the Abbey. So as an MP I felt very at home, but there were important differences.
The Commons is a scene of noisy disagreement, while in the Abbey we were surrounded by a thousand years of reflection and calm. In the Commons I would be cut off mid-flow if I went a minute over my allotted time, but in the Abbey I spoke for as long as I needed to and had some hope the audience might actually have been listening. When I spoke in the House of Commons I was just yards from where my hero William Pitt the Younger (Hague 2005) debated with Fox and Burke and Sheridan, but he was actually buried in the Abbey, with his father, in what I believe is the only grave in our country to contain two prime ministers.
People often comment that politicians are becoming younger, but Pitt was prime minister at the age of 24. There has never been a younger occupant of Number 10 before or since, and I doubt there will ever be one again or one as peculiarly gifted as a parliamentary orator. Pitt was prime minister for 18 years and 11 months, and for half that time Britain was at war with France and frequently at risk of invasion.
Another hero of mine, WilliamWilberforce(Hague 2008), is also buried in the Abbey, thanks to his family and friends countermanding his wish to be buried elsewhere. His house, Number 4 Palace Yard, stood just over the wall and was by every account a veritable pandemonium of books, pets, visitors and hapless servants he never had the heart to let go. From amid that ferment of ideas and activity he spent 20 years converting the people and entire political establishment of Britain to the cause of abolition. Year after year he moved motions in the House of Commons that were defeated. But in 1807, two decades after he began, he finally succeeded in turning our country from a slave-trading nation into one that bullied, harassed and bribed other countries into giving up their own detestable traffic in humans. And he did this without ever holding any office in any government.
Although I am not an intensely religious person, in writing my book onWilberforceI came to admire the unquenchable determination to succeed in a cause that religion in his case evangelical Christianity inspired in him. Because he believed he was accounting to God for how he spent his time, he actually recorded what he did with it. His papers include tables detailing each quarter hour of the day. One typical entry describes seven and a half hours of Commons business, eight and a quarter hours in bed, five and a half hours of requisite company &c visits &c, threequarters of an hour of serious reading and meditation, 15 minutes unaccounted for or dressing and one hour described as squandered.
While few in his age had his gift with words and his obsessive drive,Wilberforcewas not alone in being inspired by his faith. He was part of theClaphamsect, a small group of politicians, lawyers, merchants, churchmen and bankers based aroundClaphamCommon, who were responsible for one of the greatest varieties and volumes of charitable activity ever launched by any group of people in any age.
Their primary goal was the abolition of the slave trade and the founding of Sierra Leone, but on top of this they set up a staggering array of charitable causes: the London Missionary Society; the Society for Bettering the Condition and Increasing the Comforts of the Poor; the Church Missionary Society; the Religious Tract Society; the Society for Promoting the Religious Instruction of Youth; the Society for the Relief of the Industrious Poor; the British National Endeavour for the Orphans of Soldiers and Sailors; the Institution for the Protection of Young Girls; the Society for the Suppression of Vice; the Sunday School Union; the Society forSupercedingthe Necessity for Climbing Boys in Cleansing Chimneys; the British and Foreign Bible Society; and two with particularly wonderful names: The Asylum House of Refuge for the Reception of Orphaned Girls the Settlements of whose Parents Cannot be Found and, finally, the Friendly Female Society, for the Relief of Poor, Infirm, Aged Widows, and Single Women of Good Character, Who Have Seen Better Days. And we thinkwelive in an age of activism.
***
I know that for many people today religious faith of all kinds remains a great inspiration and channel for charity and altruism. And whatever faith or creed we live by, inherent in our democracy is the idea that our freedoms and rights are universal. Oppression or conflict or poverty or injustice anywhere in the world has stirred our consciences, as individuals and collectively, throughout our history. I want to argue that maintaining and building on that national tradition is absolutely vital in the twenty-first century, both as a moral obligation and in order to prevent wars at a time of growing international instability.
The year 2014, when I delivered my lecture in Westminster Abbey, saw us marking 100 years since the First World War, in which so many of our countrymen perished because conflict was not averted. Remembering that dreadful conflict should inspire us to maintain our restless conscience as a nation and be determined to do whatever we can to improve the condition of humanity. We should have faith in the broadest sense in our ideas and our ideals as a country, and in our ability to have a positive impact on the development of other nations and the future of our world.
One of the most moving sights I have seen in some time was the sea of poppies encircling the Tower of London, commemorating each and every British and Commonwealth military fatality in the First World War. It was a silent exhortation to remember, to be grateful for what we have and to learn the lessons of those times when peace had to be restored at so great a price to humanity. So too is the revered Grave of the Unknown Warrior in Westminster Abbey, buried among Kings, as his gravestone says, as one of the many who gave the most that man can give, life itself, for God, for King and Country, for Loved Ones and Empire, for the Sacred Cause of Justice and the Freedom of the World. The remains of 15 British soldiers from the War were reburied in Belgium in October 2014, 100 years after they were killed in battle, reminding us that we are still counting the cost of that terrible conflagration.
As Foreign Secretary, for four years I occupied the office used by Sir Edward Grey, with its windows overlookingHorseguardsand St Jamess Park. Standing at those windows, as he contemplated the catastrophe about to engulf the world, he famously said, the lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime. The failure of diplomacy on the eve of the War ushered in greater suffering than Grey and his contemporaries could ever have imagined: war on an industrial scale, the butchery of the unknown by the unseen, in the words of one war correspondent, in which 10 million soldiers died on all sides, 20 million were severely wounded and eight million were permanently disabled; in which appalling massacres, rapes and other atrocities were committed against thousands of civilians and millions of refugees were created; and which was all to be followed by the Second World War, the massacres in Poland, the gas chambers and extermination camps of the Holocaust, pogroms in the Soviet Union and the slaughter of war and revolution in China.
It is tempting to look back on the horrors and evils of the past and to think that these things could not happen again. It would be comforting to imagine that we have reached such a level of education and enlightenment that ideologies like Nazism, Fascism and Communism that led to mass slaughter, and the nationalism that leads states to attack theirneighboursor groups within states to massacre their fellow citizens, have all seen an end. Sadly, I believe this is an illusion.
There is an additional illusion that sometimes takes hold, as it did before the First World War, that a permanent peace has arrived. Then, Europe had enjoyed 99 years without widespread war. The Great Powers had found a way back from the brink of conflict several times, and Grey and his colleagues can be forgiven for thinking that crises would always be resolved by diplomacy, when in fact they were on the edge of the two greatest cataclysms in history.
History shows that while circumstances change, human nature is immutable. However educated, advanced or technologically skilled we become, we are still highly prone to errors ofjudgement, to greed and thus to conflict. There is no irreversible progress towards democracy, human rights and greater freedoms just as there is unlikely to be any such thing as a state of permanent peace. Unless each generation acts to preserve the gains it inherits and to build upon them for the future, then peace, democracy and freedom can easily be eroded, and conflict can readily break out.
***
It is true that there is more education, welfare, charitableendeavourand kindness in our world than ever before, that we have reached extraordinary diplomatic milestones like the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and that we have a United Nations (UN) system carrying out responsibilities from peacekeeping to the protection of our environment. We should never lose faith in the positive side of human nature and always retain our optimism and belief in our ability to shape our destiny. But my argument is that it is also true that the capacity of human beings to inflict unspeakable violence upon others, of ideologies that are pure evil to rise up or for states that are badly led to wade into new forms of conflict are all as present as ever.
We often read about massacres as if such barbaric things are only to be found in the pages of history. But the short span of our own lifetimes tells a different story, from Europe to the Middle East, to Africa and Asia. Only in 1995, in Europe, 8000 men and boys were massacred inSrebrenicain a single week. Over five million people have been killed in the Congo in the two decades up to 2014.
In April 2014, when I attended the20thanniversary of the Rwandan massacres, I and the other international representatives were standing where nearly a third of a million people are buried in a single grave, a third of the million women, men and children slain in cold blood within 100 days. Also in 2014, two of Pol Pots henchmen, part of the Khmer Rouge regime that killed more than a million people, were convicted and given life sentences. In Iraq and Syria, in a perversion of religion,ISIL(Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant) is currently terrorizing communities with beheadings and crucifixions. And think of the barrel bombs that have rained down on schools in Syria from theAssadregime and the pitiless desperation to hold on to power needed to produce such utter inhumanity.
Aggressive ideology, despotism and fanaticism live on, despite all our other advances and achievements. This is the human condition. Our optimism and faith in human nature will always have to contend with this harsh truth, at the same time as being essential to overcoming such evils. That is why it is so important for us to have a strong sense of history so that we never lose sight of how fragile peace and security can be. And so we understand that diplomacy and the peaceful resolution of conflicts is not an abstract concept but our greatest responsibility.
In our information-rich, media-saturated world, history can be caricatured as a luxury, not least for those who have their hands full running the country. But I could not imagine having been Foreign Secretary without drawing on the advice of the Foreign Office historians, who were able to offer historical precedents for every conceivable revolution, insurgency, treaty or crisis, and who produced maps and papers that shed light on the most intractable of modern problems. It is as important to consult the lessons of history in foreign policy as it is to seek the advice of our embassies, our intelligence agencies, our military and our allies. History is not set in stone and is open to endless reinterpretation. But the habit of deep and searching thought rooted in history must be cultivated: not toparalyseus or make us excessively pessimistic, but to help us make sound decisions and guide our actions.
It remains as true today as it was when Edmund Burke first expressed it that the only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for good men and women to do nothing. We cannot in our generation coast along or think it is not our responsibility or that it is too difficult to tackle conflict and injustice that bring misery to millions. However pressing the crises of the day, we have to address the fundamental conditions that lead to armed conflict and reduce the human suffering it causes. This means not only maintaining Britains global role living up to our responsibilities, protecting our interests internationally and being able to project military power where necessary but also consciously encouraging and developing the ideas, concepts and strategies needed to address poverty, conflict and injustice.
All our advances start with an idea. Powerful ideas can then become unstoppable movements as indeed the abolition of the slave trade did in the eighteenth century. For that to happen governments have to adopt the best of these ideas, and leaders have to be prepared to be open and radical.
***
The title of my essay is taken from a remark by Admiral John Fisher, First Sea Lord in the early nineteenth century and commander of the Royal Navy at the start of the First World War. In 1899, he was sent as Britains representative to the first Hague Peace Conference, called by Russia, to discuss the growing arms race and place curbs on the use of certain weapons in war. As these proposals were discussed at the negotiating table, he is said to have remarked with some passion that one could sooner talk of humanising hell than of humanising war. While he was, of course, right about the hell of war, in actual fact the traumatic experience of conflict and great idealism have often gone together. It has frequently been the very experience of war that has spurred mankinds greatest advances in international relations, based on ideas that were radical when first presented.
When HenryDunantobserved the agonizing deaths of thousands of injured men at the battle ofSolferinoin 1859, his outrage and activism led to the 1864 Geneva Convention, the founding text of contemporary international humanitarian law, which laid the foundation for the treatment of prisoners in war. After the First World War, there was a vast and intensive period of institution building, leading to the League of Nations, InternationalLabourOrganization, the prohibition on use of chemical weapons and the creation of the High Commissioner for Refugees to find a way of returning millions of European refugees to their homes, which supports over 50 million refugees and displaced people worldwide today.
While the Second World War was raging, Roosevelt and Churchill spent hours discussing the creation of a new international body to prevent conflict in the future, which led to the United Nations itself, the Security Council and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. More recently, in our lifetime, the outrage at atrocities in Cambodia, Rwanda, Liberia and Bosnia led to the creation of the International Criminal Court and the concept of the Responsibility to Protect. Since 1990 our country has played a leading role in securing international bans on the use of cluster munitions andlandmines, and I was proud to sign on Britains behalf the ratification of the International Arms Trade Treaty, the culmination of ten years of advocacy begun here in Britain.
The humanising of the hell of war is a continual process. While our goal must always be to avert conflict in the first place, except as a last resort as provided in the UN charter, it is also essential to establish norms ofbehaviourabout what is unacceptable even in times of war. This is vital so that if conflict breaks out despite our best efforts, governments feel restrained by the threat of accountability for any crimes that are committed, we have mechanisms to protect civilians and peace agreements take account of the need for reconciliation and the punishment of crimes against humanity. The crucial point is that while the international bodies we have are the result of diplomacy, they do not simply arise on their own. They are the product of ideas generated by individuals, groups or governments refusing to accept thestatus quo, such that then, with enough momentum, public support and political commitment became reality.
I think of this restless conscience, as I call it, as an enduring and admirable British characteristic. Our nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), lawyers, academics and Crown servants have had an extraordinary impact internationally. In my time in the Foreign Office I found our diplomats a powerful part of this tradition, from their work on the abolition of the death penalty, to improving the lot of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) communities worldwide, to helping negotiations as far away as the nowsuccessful Mindanao Peace Process in the Philippines. This is part of our countrys distinctive contribution to the world, and it involves the power of our ideas as much as the skill of our diplomats. We must always cherish and encourage that flow of ideas and idealism and those rivers of soft power and influence that form such a large part of our role in the world.
It is also true that diplomatic negotiations for peace do not simply arise automatically. They require extraordinary effort by individuals. US former Secretary of State, John Kerry, for example, deserves praise for his tireless work on the IsraeliPalestinian conflict. He chose to devote weeks on end trying to restart and conclude those negotiations, rather than taking the easy route of not attempting such a difficult task. Individuals and the choices they make have an immense impact. Sometimes the individual is someone in high office, like William Pitt, who did his utmost in the early1790sto avoid war with France and whose State Paper of 1805 was the basis for European peace for most of the nineteenth century. Or it is someone likeWilberforce, who was never a government minister, but whose ideas and energy brought relief, an end of suffering and ultimately freedom for millions of people.
Choices are motivated differently. The coalition to end the British slave trade was driven not just by moral considerations, but also by political and economic factors. Adam Smith argued against slavery because he saw it as an inefficient allocation of resources. British naval supremacy in the world meant that in simple political terms, abolition was possible because we had the diplomatic and military muscle to enforce it. AndWilberforcewas outraged that slaves had no opportunity to embrace Christianity, so their souls were being lost. So his key argument against the trade was neither economic nor political, it was religious. It is inevitable that in this way governments, like individuals, are motivated by a number of different factors. But we must pursue the issues today that bring together the moral interest and the national interest, using the combination of powerful ideas, our strong institutions and our global role.
***
We should be proud that, so far, our country has kept its promise to spend 0.7 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) on international development, not just because it is morally right, but also because it is profoundly in our national interest to help other nations lift their citizens out of poverty. We have to continue to lead global efforts to stop the illegal wildlife trade, which destroys the natural heritage of African nations, undermines economic development and creates instability. It is vital that we promote a rules-based international system, because it nourishes the commerce, trade and stability that are the lifeblood of our own economy as well as strengthening human rights internationally. And it is essential that we support political reform, civil society, womens rights and economic progress in the Middle East, because it is vital to our long-term security that that region becomes more free, more stable and more prosperous.
The pursuit of policies that bring stability in the world, and the moral authority for them, are inseparable. Any idea that we should retrench, withdraw or turn away from these issues is misguided and wrong for two reasons. First, the world is becoming systemically less stable. This is due to many different factors: the dispersal of power amongst a wider group of nations, many of whom do not fully share our values and our objectives in foreign policy; the diffusion of power away from governments, accelerated by technology; the globalization of ideas and ability of people to organize themselves into leaderless movements and spread ideas around the world within minutes; our interconnectedness, a boon for development but also a major vulnerability to threats, from terrorism and cyber crime to the spread of diseases like Ebola; the growing global middle class, which is driving demand for greater accountability and more freedom within states designed to suppress such instincts; and the rise of religious intolerance in the Middle East.
Global institutions are struggling to deal with these trends. It is not enough to ensure there is no conflict on our own continent, although sadly the crisis in Ukraine has shown, once again, that even Europe is not immune. Conflict anywhere in the world affects us through refugee flows, the crimes and terrorism that conflict fuels and the billions of pounds needed in humanitarian assistance, so we have to address these issues.
Second, the pursuit of sound development, inclusive politics and the rule of law are essential to our moral standing in the world, which is in turn an important factor in our international influence. As I pointed out in 2006, the US and UK suffered a loss of moral authority as a result of aspects of the War on Terror, which affected the standing of our foreign policy and the willingness of other countries to work with us, and which both President Obamas administration and our own government worked hard to address. We are strongest when we act with moral authority, and that means being the strongest champions of our values.
Thus, neither as a matter of wise policy nor as a matter of conscience can Britain ever afford to turn aside from a global role. We have to continue to be restless advocates for improving the condition of humanity. This means continuing to forge new alliances, reforming the UN and other global institutions and enforcing the rules that govern international relations. But that will never be enough by itself, so we also have to retain the ambition to influence not just the resolutions that are passed and the treaties that are signed up to, but also the beliefs in the world about what is acceptable and what is not.
A powerful example of an issue on which we need to apply such leadership is the use of rape and sexual violence as weapons of war. I have been surprised by how deeply engrained and passive attitudes to this subject often are. Because history is full of accounts of the mass abuse of women and captives, and because there is so much domestic violence in all societies, it is a widely held view that violence against women and girls is inevitable in peacetime and in conflict.
But when we seeISILforeign fighters in Iraq and Syria selling women as slaves and glorifying rape and sexual slavery; when we hear of refugees, who have already lost everything, being raped in camps for want of basic protections; when we see leaders exhorting their fighters to go out and rape their opponents, specifically to inflict terror, to make women pregnant, to force people to flee their homes and to destroy their families and communities; or peace agreements giving amnesty to men who have ordered and carried out rape or deliberately turned a blind eye to it; or soldiers and even peacekeepers committing rape due to lack of discipline, proper training, no accountability and a culture that treats women as the spoils of war, a commodity to be exploited with impunity, then we are clearly dealing with injustice on a scale that is simply intolerable, as well as damaging to the stability of those countries and the peace of the wider world.
It is often said to me that without war there would be nowarzonerape, as if that is the only way to address the problem. While of course our goal is always to prevent conflict, we cannot simply consign millions of women, men, girls and boys to the suffering of rape while we seek a way to put an end to all conflict, since, as I have argued, this goal is one we should always strive for but may often not attain.
***
We have shown that we can put restraints on the way war is conducted. We have put beyond the pale the use of poison gas or torture and devised the Arms Trade Treaty for the trade in illegal weapons. It is time to address this aspect of conflict and to treat sexual violence as an issue of global peace and security. The biggest obstacle we face in this campaign is the idea you cannot do anything about it that you cannot humanise hell, that there is nothing we can do to endwarzonerape. But there is hope, and we must dispel this pessimism. Over the last two years, working with NGOs, the UN and faith groups, we have brought the weight and influence of Britain to bear globally as no country ever has done before on this subject.
Over 150 countries have joined our campaign and endorsed a global declaration of commitment to end sexual violence in conflict. We brought together over 120 governments and thousands of people at a Global Summit in London in June 2014, the first of its kind. And in countries like the Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan and Colombia we are seeing signs of governments being prepared to address this issue by passing laws and reforming their militaries.
What would it say about our commitment to human rights in our own society if we knew about such abuses but did nothing about them? And how could we be at the forefront of preventing conflict in the world if we did not act to prevent something that causes conflict in the future? Sexual violence is often designed to make peace impossible to achieve and create the bitterness and incentive for future conflict. Dealing with it is not a luxury to be added on, it is an integral part of conflict prevention, a crucial part of breaking a cycle of war. And it has to go hand in hand with seeking the full political, social and economic empowerment of women everywhere, the greatest strategic prize of all for our century.
In 2014 we commemorated those who died in the First World War and their suffering. There is no more fitting thing we can do for the sake of that memory than to face up to the hell of conflict in our lifetimes. We have never had to mobilize our population to fight in the way their generation did, and so we have been spared their painful burdens. But how much more incumbent does that make it on all of us to fight with the peaceful tools at our disposal on behalf of those who are denied, through no fault of their own, the security we consider our birthright.
Just as inWilberforces day, it will always be necessary for Britain to be at the forefront of efforts to improve the condition of humanity. The search for peace and an end to conflict requires powerful ideas and the relentlessdefenceof our values, as much it does negotiations and summits between nations. We could be heading for such turbulent times that it will be easy for some people to say we should not bother with development or tackling sexual violence in conflict or other such issues. There will always be the pressing crisis of the day that risks drowning out such longterm causes. But, in fact, addressing these issues is crucial to overcoming crises now and in the future and it will be an increasingly important part of our moral authority and standing in the world that we are seen to do this.
Just because there are economic crises and major social changes does not mean we or our partners can squander any day or any year in producing the ideas as well as the laws that prevent conflict and deal with some of the greatest scourges of the twenty-first century, and we must do so with confidence: for it remains the case that free and democratic societies are the only places where the ideas and the moral force we need can be found. Our times call for a renewal of that effort for just and equitable solutions to conflict, the driving down of global inequalities and the confronting of injustices.
Every day we have to start again: there is not going to be a day in our lifetimes when we can wake up and say this work is complete. We have to overcome the sense of helplessness that says that vast problems cannot be tackled. We have to awaken the conscience of nations and stir the actions of governments. In an age of mass communication this is a task for every one of us. Whether we are in government, are diplomats, journalists, members of the armed forces, members of the public, students, faith groups or civil servants, every one of us is part of that effort.
In Britain, our restless conscience should never allow us to withdraw behind our fortifications and turn away from the world but should always inspire us to strive for peace and security, to maintain our responsibilities, seek new ways of addressing the worst aspects of humanbehaviourand live up to our greatest traditions.
This essay is taken from The Moral Heart of Public Service, edited by Claire Foster-Gilbert and published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers, priced 15.99, on 21 June 2017.
Continued here:
Posted in Abolition Of Work
Comments Off on Humanising hell – New Statesman
From Beyonc to Little Mix (via Kendall Jenner): how protest went pop – New Statesman
Posted: at 2:03 pm
This essay is based upon the One People Oration I delivered at Westminster Abbey in October 2014. I have made hundreds of speeches in the House of Commons as a Member of Parliament for 25 years, but this was the only one I had given in Westminster Abbey. In its early days, in the early1300s, Parliament actually sat there, in the Chapter House and then in the Refectory of the Abbey. So as an MP I felt very at home, but there were important differences.
The Commons is a scene of noisy disagreement, while in the Abbey we were surrounded by a thousand years of reflection and calm. In the Commons I would be cut off mid-flow if I went a minute over my allotted time, but in the Abbey I spoke for as long as I needed to and had some hope the audience might actually have been listening. When I spoke in the House of Commons I was just yards from where my hero William Pitt the Younger (Hague 2005) debated with Fox and Burke and Sheridan, but he was actually buried in the Abbey, with his father, in what I believe is the only grave in our country to contain two prime ministers.
People often comment that politicians are becoming younger, but Pitt was prime minister at the age of 24. There has never been a younger occupant of Number 10 before or since, and I doubt there will ever be one again or one as peculiarly gifted as a parliamentary orator. Pitt was prime minister for 18 years and 11 months, and for half that time Britain was at war with France and frequently at risk of invasion.
Another hero of mine, WilliamWilberforce(Hague 2008), is also buried in the Abbey, thanks to his family and friends countermanding his wish to be buried elsewhere. His house, Number 4 Palace Yard, stood just over the wall and was by every account a veritable pandemonium of books, pets, visitors and hapless servants he never had the heart to let go. From amid that ferment of ideas and activity he spent 20 years converting the people and entire political establishment of Britain to the cause of abolition. Year after year he moved motions in the House of Commons that were defeated. But in 1807, two decades after he began, he finally succeeded in turning our country from a slave-trading nation into one that bullied, harassed and bribed other countries into giving up their own detestable traffic in humans. And he did this without ever holding any office in any government.
Although I am not an intensely religious person, in writing my book onWilberforceI came to admire the unquenchable determination to succeed in a cause that religion in his case evangelical Christianity inspired in him. Because he believed he was accounting to God for how he spent his time, he actually recorded what he did with it. His papers include tables detailing each quarter hour of the day. One typical entry describes seven and a half hours of Commons business, eight and a quarter hours in bed, five and a half hours of requisite company &c visits &c, threequarters of an hour of serious reading and meditation, 15 minutes unaccounted for or dressing and one hour described as squandered.
While few in his age had his gift with words and his obsessive drive,Wilberforcewas not alone in being inspired by his faith. He was part of theClaphamsect, a small group of politicians, lawyers, merchants, churchmen and bankers based aroundClaphamCommon, who were responsible for one of the greatest varieties and volumes of charitable activity ever launched by any group of people in any age.
Their primary goal was the abolition of the slave trade and the founding of Sierra Leone, but on top of this they set up a staggering array of charitable causes: the London Missionary Society; the Society for Bettering the Condition and Increasing the Comforts of the Poor; the Church Missionary Society; the Religious Tract Society; the Society for Promoting the Religious Instruction of Youth; the Society for the Relief of the Industrious Poor; the British National Endeavour for the Orphans of Soldiers and Sailors; the Institution for the Protection of Young Girls; the Society for the Suppression of Vice; the Sunday School Union; the Society forSupercedingthe Necessity for Climbing Boys in Cleansing Chimneys; the British and Foreign Bible Society; and two with particularly wonderful names: The Asylum House of Refuge for the Reception of Orphaned Girls the Settlements of whose Parents Cannot be Found and, finally, the Friendly Female Society, for the Relief of Poor, Infirm, Aged Widows, and Single Women of Good Character, Who Have Seen Better Days. And we thinkwelive in an age of activism.
***
I know that for many people today religious faith of all kinds remains a great inspiration and channel for charity and altruism. And whatever faith or creed we live by, inherent in our democracy is the idea that our freedoms and rights are universal. Oppression or conflict or poverty or injustice anywhere in the world has stirred our consciences, as individuals and collectively, throughout our history. I want to argue that maintaining and building on that national tradition is absolutely vital in the twenty-first century, both as a moral obligation and in order to prevent wars at a time of growing international instability.
The year 2014, when I delivered my lecture in Westminster Abbey, saw us marking 100 years since the First World War, in which so many of our countrymen perished because conflict was not averted. Remembering that dreadful conflict should inspire us to maintain our restless conscience as a nation and be determined to do whatever we can to improve the condition of humanity. We should have faith in the broadest sense in our ideas and our ideals as a country, and in our ability to have a positive impact on the development of other nations and the future of our world.
One of the most moving sights I have seen in some time was the sea of poppies encircling the Tower of London, commemorating each and every British and Commonwealth military fatality in the First World War. It was a silent exhortation to remember, to be grateful for what we have and to learn the lessons of those times when peace had to be restored at so great a price to humanity. So too is the revered Grave of the Unknown Warrior in Westminster Abbey, buried among Kings, as his gravestone says, as one of the many who gave the most that man can give, life itself, for God, for King and Country, for Loved Ones and Empire, for the Sacred Cause of Justice and the Freedom of the World. The remains of 15 British soldiers from the War were reburied in Belgium in October 2014, 100 years after they were killed in battle, reminding us that we are still counting the cost of that terrible conflagration.
As Foreign Secretary, for four years I occupied the office used by Sir Edward Grey, with its windows overlookingHorseguardsand St Jamess Park. Standing at those windows, as he contemplated the catastrophe about to engulf the world, he famously said, the lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime. The failure of diplomacy on the eve of the War ushered in greater suffering than Grey and his contemporaries could ever have imagined: war on an industrial scale, the butchery of the unknown by the unseen, in the words of one war correspondent, in which 10 million soldiers died on all sides, 20 million were severely wounded and eight million were permanently disabled; in which appalling massacres, rapes and other atrocities were committed against thousands of civilians and millions of refugees were created; and which was all to be followed by the Second World War, the massacres in Poland, the gas chambers and extermination camps of the Holocaust, pogroms in the Soviet Union and the slaughter of war and revolution in China.
It is tempting to look back on the horrors and evils of the past and to think that these things could not happen again. It would be comforting to imagine that we have reached such a level of education and enlightenment that ideologies like Nazism, Fascism and Communism that led to mass slaughter, and the nationalism that leads states to attack theirneighboursor groups within states to massacre their fellow citizens, have all seen an end. Sadly, I believe this is an illusion.
There is an additional illusion that sometimes takes hold, as it did before the First World War, that a permanent peace has arrived. Then, Europe had enjoyed 99 years without widespread war. The Great Powers had found a way back from the brink of conflict several times, and Grey and his colleagues can be forgiven for thinking that crises would always be resolved by diplomacy, when in fact they were on the edge of the two greatest cataclysms in history.
History shows that while circumstances change, human nature is immutable. However educated, advanced or technologically skilled we become, we are still highly prone to errors ofjudgement, to greed and thus to conflict. There is no irreversible progress towards democracy, human rights and greater freedoms just as there is unlikely to be any such thing as a state of permanent peace. Unless each generation acts to preserve the gains it inherits and to build upon them for the future, then peace, democracy and freedom can easily be eroded, and conflict can readily break out.
***
It is true that there is more education, welfare, charitableendeavourand kindness in our world than ever before, that we have reached extraordinary diplomatic milestones like the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and that we have a United Nations (UN) system carrying out responsibilities from peacekeeping to the protection of our environment. We should never lose faith in the positive side of human nature and always retain our optimism and belief in our ability to shape our destiny. But my argument is that it is also true that the capacity of human beings to inflict unspeakable violence upon others, of ideologies that are pure evil to rise up or for states that are badly led to wade into new forms of conflict are all as present as ever.
We often read about massacres as if such barbaric things are only to be found in the pages of history. But the short span of our own lifetimes tells a different story, from Europe to the Middle East, to Africa and Asia. Only in 1995, in Europe, 8000 men and boys were massacred inSrebrenicain a single week. Over five million people have been killed in the Congo in the two decades up to 2014.
In April 2014, when I attended the20thanniversary of the Rwandan massacres, I and the other international representatives were standing where nearly a third of a million people are buried in a single grave, a third of the million women, men and children slain in cold blood within 100 days. Also in 2014, two of Pol Pots henchmen, part of the Khmer Rouge regime that killed more than a million people, were convicted and given life sentences. In Iraq and Syria, in a perversion of religion,ISIL(Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant) is currently terrorizing communities with beheadings and crucifixions. And think of the barrel bombs that have rained down on schools in Syria from theAssadregime and the pitiless desperation to hold on to power needed to produce such utter inhumanity.
Aggressive ideology, despotism and fanaticism live on, despite all our other advances and achievements. This is the human condition. Our optimism and faith in human nature will always have to contend with this harsh truth, at the same time as being essential to overcoming such evils. That is why it is so important for us to have a strong sense of history so that we never lose sight of how fragile peace and security can be. And so we understand that diplomacy and the peaceful resolution of conflicts is not an abstract concept but our greatest responsibility.
In our information-rich, media-saturated world, history can be caricatured as a luxury, not least for those who have their hands full running the country. But I could not imagine having been Foreign Secretary without drawing on the advice of the Foreign Office historians, who were able to offer historical precedents for every conceivable revolution, insurgency, treaty or crisis, and who produced maps and papers that shed light on the most intractable of modern problems. It is as important to consult the lessons of history in foreign policy as it is to seek the advice of our embassies, our intelligence agencies, our military and our allies. History is not set in stone and is open to endless reinterpretation. But the habit of deep and searching thought rooted in history must be cultivated: not toparalyseus or make us excessively pessimistic, but to help us make sound decisions and guide our actions.
It remains as true today as it was when Edmund Burke first expressed it that the only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for good men and women to do nothing. We cannot in our generation coast along or think it is not our responsibility or that it is too difficult to tackle conflict and injustice that bring misery to millions. However pressing the crises of the day, we have to address the fundamental conditions that lead to armed conflict and reduce the human suffering it causes. This means not only maintaining Britains global role living up to our responsibilities, protecting our interests internationally and being able to project military power where necessary but also consciously encouraging and developing the ideas, concepts and strategies needed to address poverty, conflict and injustice.
All our advances start with an idea. Powerful ideas can then become unstoppable movements as indeed the abolition of the slave trade did in the eighteenth century. For that to happen governments have to adopt the best of these ideas, and leaders have to be prepared to be open and radical.
***
The title of my essay is taken from a remark by Admiral John Fisher, First Sea Lord in the early nineteenth century and commander of the Royal Navy at the start of the First World War. In 1899, he was sent as Britains representative to the first Hague Peace Conference, called by Russia, to discuss the growing arms race and place curbs on the use of certain weapons in war. As these proposals were discussed at the negotiating table, he is said to have remarked with some passion that one could sooner talk of humanising hell than of humanising war. While he was, of course, right about the hell of war, in actual fact the traumatic experience of conflict and great idealism have often gone together. It has frequently been the very experience of war that has spurred mankinds greatest advances in international relations, based on ideas that were radical when first presented.
When HenryDunantobserved the agonizing deaths of thousands of injured men at the battle ofSolferinoin 1859, his outrage and activism led to the 1864 Geneva Convention, the founding text of contemporary international humanitarian law, which laid the foundation for the treatment of prisoners in war. After the First World War, there was a vast and intensive period of institution building, leading to the League of Nations, InternationalLabourOrganization, the prohibition on use of chemical weapons and the creation of the High Commissioner for Refugees to find a way of returning millions of European refugees to their homes, which supports over 50 million refugees and displaced people worldwide today.
While the Second World War was raging, Roosevelt and Churchill spent hours discussing the creation of a new international body to prevent conflict in the future, which led to the United Nations itself, the Security Council and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. More recently, in our lifetime, the outrage at atrocities in Cambodia, Rwanda, Liberia and Bosnia led to the creation of the International Criminal Court and the concept of the Responsibility to Protect. Since 1990 our country has played a leading role in securing international bans on the use of cluster munitions andlandmines, and I was proud to sign on Britains behalf the ratification of the International Arms Trade Treaty, the culmination of ten years of advocacy begun here in Britain.
The humanising of the hell of war is a continual process. While our goal must always be to avert conflict in the first place, except as a last resort as provided in the UN charter, it is also essential to establish norms ofbehaviourabout what is unacceptable even in times of war. This is vital so that if conflict breaks out despite our best efforts, governments feel restrained by the threat of accountability for any crimes that are committed, we have mechanisms to protect civilians and peace agreements take account of the need for reconciliation and the punishment of crimes against humanity. The crucial point is that while the international bodies we have are the result of diplomacy, they do not simply arise on their own. They are the product of ideas generated by individuals, groups or governments refusing to accept thestatus quo, such that then, with enough momentum, public support and political commitment became reality.
I think of this restless conscience, as I call it, as an enduring and admirable British characteristic. Our nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), lawyers, academics and Crown servants have had an extraordinary impact internationally. In my time in the Foreign Office I found our diplomats a powerful part of this tradition, from their work on the abolition of the death penalty, to improving the lot of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) communities worldwide, to helping negotiations as far away as the nowsuccessful Mindanao Peace Process in the Philippines. This is part of our countrys distinctive contribution to the world, and it involves the power of our ideas as much as the skill of our diplomats. We must always cherish and encourage that flow of ideas and idealism and those rivers of soft power and influence that form such a large part of our role in the world.
It is also true that diplomatic negotiations for peace do not simply arise automatically. They require extraordinary effort by individuals. US former Secretary of State, John Kerry, for example, deserves praise for his tireless work on the IsraeliPalestinian conflict. He chose to devote weeks on end trying to restart and conclude those negotiations, rather than taking the easy route of not attempting such a difficult task. Individuals and the choices they make have an immense impact. Sometimes the individual is someone in high office, like William Pitt, who did his utmost in the early1790sto avoid war with France and whose State Paper of 1805 was the basis for European peace for most of the nineteenth century. Or it is someone likeWilberforce, who was never a government minister, but whose ideas and energy brought relief, an end of suffering and ultimately freedom for millions of people.
Choices are motivated differently. The coalition to end the British slave trade was driven not just by moral considerations, but also by political and economic factors. Adam Smith argued against slavery because he saw it as an inefficient allocation of resources. British naval supremacy in the world meant that in simple political terms, abolition was possible because we had the diplomatic and military muscle to enforce it. AndWilberforcewas outraged that slaves had no opportunity to embrace Christianity, so their souls were being lost. So his key argument against the trade was neither economic nor political, it was religious. It is inevitable that in this way governments, like individuals, are motivated by a number of different factors. But we must pursue the issues today that bring together the moral interest and the national interest, using the combination of powerful ideas, our strong institutions and our global role.
***
We should be proud that, so far, our country has kept its promise to spend 0.7 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) on international development, not just because it is morally right, but also because it is profoundly in our national interest to help other nations lift their citizens out of poverty. We have to continue to lead global efforts to stop the illegal wildlife trade, which destroys the natural heritage of African nations, undermines economic development and creates instability. It is vital that we promote a rules-based international system, because it nourishes the commerce, trade and stability that are the lifeblood of our own economy as well as strengthening human rights internationally. And it is essential that we support political reform, civil society, womens rights and economic progress in the Middle East, because it is vital to our long-term security that that region becomes more free, more stable and more prosperous.
The pursuit of policies that bring stability in the world, and the moral authority for them, are inseparable. Any idea that we should retrench, withdraw or turn away from these issues is misguided and wrong for two reasons. First, the world is becoming systemically less stable. This is due to many different factors: the dispersal of power amongst a wider group of nations, many of whom do not fully share our values and our objectives in foreign policy; the diffusion of power away from governments, accelerated by technology; the globalization of ideas and ability of people to organize themselves into leaderless movements and spread ideas around the world within minutes; our interconnectedness, a boon for development but also a major vulnerability to threats, from terrorism and cyber crime to the spread of diseases like Ebola; the growing global middle class, which is driving demand for greater accountability and more freedom within states designed to suppress such instincts; and the rise of religious intolerance in the Middle East.
Global institutions are struggling to deal with these trends. It is not enough to ensure there is no conflict on our own continent, although sadly the crisis in Ukraine has shown, once again, that even Europe is not immune. Conflict anywhere in the world affects us through refugee flows, the crimes and terrorism that conflict fuels and the billions of pounds needed in humanitarian assistance, so we have to address these issues.
Second, the pursuit of sound development, inclusive politics and the rule of law are essential to our moral standing in the world, which is in turn an important factor in our international influence. As I pointed out in 2006, the US and UK suffered a loss of moral authority as a result of aspects of the War on Terror, which affected the standing of our foreign policy and the willingness of other countries to work with us, and which both President Obamas administration and our own government worked hard to address. We are strongest when we act with moral authority, and that means being the strongest champions of our values.
Thus, neither as a matter of wise policy nor as a matter of conscience can Britain ever afford to turn aside from a global role. We have to continue to be restless advocates for improving the condition of humanity. This means continuing to forge new alliances, reforming the UN and other global institutions and enforcing the rules that govern international relations. But that will never be enough by itself, so we also have to retain the ambition to influence not just the resolutions that are passed and the treaties that are signed up to, but also the beliefs in the world about what is acceptable and what is not.
A powerful example of an issue on which we need to apply such leadership is the use of rape and sexual violence as weapons of war. I have been surprised by how deeply engrained and passive attitudes to this subject often are. Because history is full of accounts of the mass abuse of women and captives, and because there is so much domestic violence in all societies, it is a widely held view that violence against women and girls is inevitable in peacetime and in conflict.
But when we seeISILforeign fighters in Iraq and Syria selling women as slaves and glorifying rape and sexual slavery; when we hear of refugees, who have already lost everything, being raped in camps for want of basic protections; when we see leaders exhorting their fighters to go out and rape their opponents, specifically to inflict terror, to make women pregnant, to force people to flee their homes and to destroy their families and communities; or peace agreements giving amnesty to men who have ordered and carried out rape or deliberately turned a blind eye to it; or soldiers and even peacekeepers committing rape due to lack of discipline, proper training, no accountability and a culture that treats women as the spoils of war, a commodity to be exploited with impunity, then we are clearly dealing with injustice on a scale that is simply intolerable, as well as damaging to the stability of those countries and the peace of the wider world.
It is often said to me that without war there would be nowarzonerape, as if that is the only way to address the problem. While of course our goal is always to prevent conflict, we cannot simply consign millions of women, men, girls and boys to the suffering of rape while we seek a way to put an end to all conflict, since, as I have argued, this goal is one we should always strive for but may often not attain.
***
We have shown that we can put restraints on the way war is conducted. We have put beyond the pale the use of poison gas or torture and devised the Arms Trade Treaty for the trade in illegal weapons. It is time to address this aspect of conflict and to treat sexual violence as an issue of global peace and security. The biggest obstacle we face in this campaign is the idea you cannot do anything about it that you cannot humanise hell, that there is nothing we can do to endwarzonerape. But there is hope, and we must dispel this pessimism. Over the last two years, working with NGOs, the UN and faith groups, we have brought the weight and influence of Britain to bear globally as no country ever has done before on this subject.
Over 150 countries have joined our campaign and endorsed a global declaration of commitment to end sexual violence in conflict. We brought together over 120 governments and thousands of people at a Global Summit in London in June 2014, the first of its kind. And in countries like the Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan and Colombia we are seeing signs of governments being prepared to address this issue by passing laws and reforming their militaries.
What would it say about our commitment to human rights in our own society if we knew about such abuses but did nothing about them? And how could we be at the forefront of preventing conflict in the world if we did not act to prevent something that causes conflict in the future? Sexual violence is often designed to make peace impossible to achieve and create the bitterness and incentive for future conflict. Dealing with it is not a luxury to be added on, it is an integral part of conflict prevention, a crucial part of breaking a cycle of war. And it has to go hand in hand with seeking the full political, social and economic empowerment of women everywhere, the greatest strategic prize of all for our century.
In 2014 we commemorated those who died in the First World War and their suffering. There is no more fitting thing we can do for the sake of that memory than to face up to the hell of conflict in our lifetimes. We have never had to mobilize our population to fight in the way their generation did, and so we have been spared their painful burdens. But how much more incumbent does that make it on all of us to fight with the peaceful tools at our disposal on behalf of those who are denied, through no fault of their own, the security we consider our birthright.
Just as inWilberforces day, it will always be necessary for Britain to be at the forefront of efforts to improve the condition of humanity. The search for peace and an end to conflict requires powerful ideas and the relentlessdefenceof our values, as much it does negotiations and summits between nations. We could be heading for such turbulent times that it will be easy for some people to say we should not bother with development or tackling sexual violence in conflict or other such issues. There will always be the pressing crisis of the day that risks drowning out such longterm causes. But, in fact, addressing these issues is crucial to overcoming crises now and in the future and it will be an increasingly important part of our moral authority and standing in the world that we are seen to do this.
Just because there are economic crises and major social changes does not mean we or our partners can squander any day or any year in producing the ideas as well as the laws that prevent conflict and deal with some of the greatest scourges of the twenty-first century, and we must do so with confidence: for it remains the case that free and democratic societies are the only places where the ideas and the moral force we need can be found. Our times call for a renewal of that effort for just and equitable solutions to conflict, the driving down of global inequalities and the confronting of injustices.
Every day we have to start again: there is not going to be a day in our lifetimes when we can wake up and say this work is complete. We have to overcome the sense of helplessness that says that vast problems cannot be tackled. We have to awaken the conscience of nations and stir the actions of governments. In an age of mass communication this is a task for every one of us. Whether we are in government, are diplomats, journalists, members of the armed forces, members of the public, students, faith groups or civil servants, every one of us is part of that effort.
In Britain, our restless conscience should never allow us to withdraw behind our fortifications and turn away from the world but should always inspire us to strive for peace and security, to maintain our responsibilities, seek new ways of addressing the worst aspects of humanbehaviourand live up to our greatest traditions.
This essay is taken from The Moral Heart of Public Service, edited by Claire Foster-Gilbert and published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers, priced 15.99, on 21 June 2017.
Visit link:
From Beyonc to Little Mix (via Kendall Jenner): how protest went pop - New Statesman
Posted in Abolition Of Work
Comments Off on From Beyonc to Little Mix (via Kendall Jenner): how protest went pop – New Statesman
Highlighting the power of peer support in mental illness recovery – Connacht Tribune Group
Posted: at 2:02 pm
Peer support can play a crucial part in recovery from mental illness thats according to a Galway native who is one of the countrys most respected voices in this field.
Trinity College Professor in Mental Health, Agnes Higgins, reported her findings after carrying out in-depth interviews with 26 people who went through just such a peer support programme with mental health charity GROW.
Those interviewed had
mental health difficulties including bi-polar disorder, schizophrenia, anxiety and depression.
The research carried out with Dr Mike Watts shows that, although medical treatment and mental health professionals can be a vital start to recovery, mental health problems can also be resolved through peer and community support as well as everyday social interactions.
The study showed that while peer support has long been valued in recovery from various addictions it remains an under used strategy within a mental health system that is currently under serious resource pressures.
The research findings and stories have been published as a book entitled Narratives of Recovery from Mental Illness.
Research in mental health has been something Agnes has been involved in for a number of years.
She met her co-author Mike Watts, when he was national coordinator for GROW and he was interested in doing a PhD.
Given my interest and passion for mental health and the absence of research evidence in the area peer support, we decided that the focus of the PhD should be in this area, she explained.
And because of the importance of the subject matter, the pair then decided to craft their findings into a book.
Participants in the study described how life experiences such as bullying, abuse, bereavement, isolation or family disharmony led to a slow build-up of distress leading to emotional chaos.
Agnes explains that without someone to listen to and deal with the resultant trauma powerful emotions of terror, rage and despair impacted on each persons thinking and behaviour so they began to mistrust life and became trapped in a spiral of personal isolation and what was termed dialogues of terror.
The non-hierarchical culture of a peer support group within GROW resulted in people immersing in dialogues of healing.
They found themselves developing trust, becoming hopeful, experiencing a sense of personal value and belonging, and the nurturing of the beginnings of personal empowerment, she said.
She sees the book as offering an alternative way of looking at mental illness and demonstrates many unexplored avenues and paths to recovery that need to be considered.
The narratives of recovery should also be a source of hope to people struggling with mental illness and emotional distress, she said.
Part of the challenge in transforming mental health services is the lack of evidence-based studies focussing on the process and outcomes of peer support services.
We hope that it will encourage practitioners to include peer support within the menu of recovery options offered to people with a mental health problem, Agnes declares.
Agnes Higgins grew up on a farm in Kilmurry, Dunmore, the middle child of seven. She went to national school in Ballinlass and finished secondary school in 1978. Her father, Mick, passed away in 1986 and her mother, Mary, still lives in Kilmurry.
Agnes wanted to be a teacher but she explains that in those days you applied for lots of things and she was accepted for the first student nurse position she applied for.
The people who interviewed me were so welcoming, warm, and kind that I didnt hesitate for a minute in my decision, says Agnes. Her nurse training began in 1978 at St Vincents Hospital in Dublin and she qualified as a mental health nurse in 1981.
Later, Agnes trained as a general nurse and qualified in 1986. From 1990 1993 she trained and qualified as a nurse teacher and then went on to do a masters in Dublin City University and a PhD in Trinity College.
In 2000 Agnes was offered a position in the School of Nursing and Midwifery in TCD. Her first role was to develop a postgraduate diploma in clinical health sciences education, this programme was to educate nurse and midwifery teachers, she explained.
This work led to Agnes receiving the Provost Award for Teaching Excellence within the college; now, as Professor in Mental Health, she lectures on the subject to Trinity undergraduate and postgraduate students.
See the original post:
Highlighting the power of peer support in mental illness recovery - Connacht Tribune Group
Posted in Personal Empowerment
Comments Off on Highlighting the power of peer support in mental illness recovery – Connacht Tribune Group
The GOP’s new brand of freedom: The privilege of being without health insurance – Salon
Posted: at 2:02 pm
When I think of freedom, I think of it in positive, aspirational terms:our First Amendment freedoms, for example, or FDRs Four freedoms or the uplifting songs of freedom sung by oppressed people around the globe.
But right-wing, corporate-funded ideologues have fabricated a new negative notion of freedoms derived from individual choice. Youre free to be poor, free to be politically powerless or free to be ill and uncared for; its all a matter of decisions you freely make in life, and our larger society has no business interfering with your free will.
This is what passes for a philosophical framework behind many of the policies of todays Republican congressional leaders. For example, they say their plan to eliminate health coverage for millions of Americans and do away with such essential health benefits as maternity care for millions more is just a matter of good oldfree-market consumerism. As explained by Jason Chaffetz, a Utah Tea Party Republican, Americans have choices. And so maybe, rather than getting that new iPhone that they just love and they want to go spend hundreds of dollars on that, maybe they should invest in their own health care.
Lest you think that Chaffetzmust simply be an oddball jerk, heres a similar deep insight from the top House Republican, Speaker Paul Ryan: Freedom is the ability to buy what you want to fit what you need. Yes, apparently, you are as free as you can afford to be. As Vice President Mike Pence recently barked at us, Trumpcares youre-on-your-own philosophy is all about bringing freedom and individual responsibility back to American health care.
The GOPs austere view is that getting treatment for your spouses cancer should be like buying a new pair of shoes,, a free-market decision by customers who can choose their own price point from high-dollar Neiman Marcus to barging-basement Dollar General. And some go barefoot. But then thats their choice.
So thats what Republicans Trumpcare is offering us, this freedom from health care. Well, good news, people: At last, congressional Democrats have gotten a clue, grown some spine and are beginning to act like, well, like Democrats!
In particular, a majority of Dems in the U.S. House are responding to the rising public demand that decent health care be treated as a right for everyone, rather than being rationed by profiteering insurance conglomerates. Nearly 6 of 10 Democrats in the House have now signed on to Rep. John Conyers Medicare for All bill, which is being carried in the Senate by Bernie Sanders.
So, Hallelujah, progress!
Yes, but many speed bumps remain on the Democratic Partys entry ramps onto the moral high road of politics. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, for one. When the leader of House Democrats was asked if the party should make health care for all a major issue in Congress andfor the 2018 elections, she replied with a flat no. Basically, Pelosi is saying the American people arent ready for it, by which she really means that the narrow slice of the public that inhabits her world health industry executives, lobbyists and big campaign donors arent ready. Meanwhile, a good 60 percent of regular Americans are damned sure ready, telling pollsters flat out that our government has a responsibility to ensure that everyone gets the care they need.
Lets be blunt: When it comes to the fiery leadership that Americas grassroots people want and need, the Democratic Party establishment is weaker than Canadian hot sauce. When youve got 60 percent of your partys rank-and-file congressional members ready to go on such a basic issue, and 60 percent of the public is also ready to go, its time to go! The national partys leadership must get going on health care for all, or the leadership itself must go.
Read the original post:
The GOP's new brand of freedom: The privilege of being without health insurance - Salon
Posted in Freedom
Comments Off on The GOP’s new brand of freedom: The privilege of being without health insurance – Salon