Monday 29 August 2011

Try a little tenderness

I'm tired, no energy left, early night for me I think. I love this guys voice, I should listen to him more often. What a waste that he should die so young. Enjoy the music.
Nighty night, don't let the teabags bite

The world could do a lot worse than..............
TRY A LITTLE TENDERNESS




Sunday 28 August 2011

A little animal magic down on the farm.




During our weekend of local sightseeing we stopped off here for lunch. It's a working farm but like many farms, has 'diversified'. They have a cafe serving home cooked food, a farm shop, selling farm produce and a gift/ craft shop selling local hand made gifts. Just couldn't leave without a few animal photos, i did think maybe I could try a couple of animal paintings. I especially like the angus cattle.

Forfar countryside




These are just a couple of pictures that I thought would make nice paintings. I was out with my friend and she decided to pull off the road just here and look for a place to do some drawing. We found a little space just off the road and pulled in. As she was parking the whole of the front end of the car slid into a ditch we couldn't see. The ditch was completely overgrown and looked like an area of long grass. The passenger door was wedged shut, I had to climb out through the drivers door and the car leaned over to the left ( which here IS the passenger side) Fortunatly we were Ok, her car was Ok and before long a couple of people stopped to see if we needed help. It looked as if we had an accident but of course we hadn't, any way someone went to fetch the farmer who pulled us out of the ditch. That turned into quite an eventful afternoon. When it was all over my friend asked if I had pictures of the car sticking out of the ditch, opps....all the photos I take and I didn't think to take that one !!

Auchnacree Loch




Another of the places I stopped by last weekend, there really is some beautiful countryside around here. We are very lucky to have all this so close.

Saturday 27 August 2011

Glenisla, Blackwater dam




Taken up the glens las weekend 20.08.2011. Beautiul day and beautiul views.

Friday 26 August 2011

Here's my moan of the week............ I'm getting sick fed up of being told about all these lazy people who know how to 'work the system' and get stacks more money in benefits than those of us in work. I'm sick fed up with being told we would all be better off if we didn't have to pay so much tax to keep all these lazy people who don't want to work running about in their fancy cars and watching big screen TV's. NEWSFLASH...........its bloody hard to live off benefits, you don't get enough to live on ( I know I've done it), its bloody hard to get any sort of benefit at all these days because the gov are desperately trying to cut into out benefit system. There are NO jobs for all these so called lazy people to go get anyway and most of all..............if you want to blame someone try blaming the 1% of population who own 30% of wealth ( UK) or if you are in US the top 1% who own 34% of wealth........the figures may not be exact but I'm sure you get the point. Here we have a perfect example of divide and rule. The media set the poor in work against the poor out of work when we should all be blaming the god damn wealthy. Shit ...when did we all become so stupid. ok..... moan over..............

Art Sunday; Maggie Beveridge









http://www.maggiebeveridge.com/

The artists name is Maggie Bevereridge and she is a Scottish artist whose work now hangs in private galleries all over the UK and the rest of the world.







This ‘artist’ didn’t train as an artist, she graduated with an honours degree in Botany from Glasgow University in 1976, then worked in arts administration, publishing and aquaculture before exhibiting her paintings for the first time at the University of Stirling in 1993. 





Since then she has exhibited throughout the UK and her paintings hang in private collections in the UK, Ireland, France, Spain, Sweden, Japan, Australia, Canada and the USA.  She now paints part-time, edits part-time and is studying for another degree, this time in Herbal Medicine.










Her paintings, most of which depict animals, are strongly influenced by childhood memories of the west coast of Scotland.









I love the way this lady comes across as a ‘whole’ person with ties to and knowledge of, the earth, plants, water and now herbal medicine.

 


I can see all of this knowledge and her country upbringing reflected in her work.


There is a childlike quality in her I find quite charming, if she ever becomes a herbalist and owns her own premises I can think of nothing more fitting to hang on the walls than her own work.


Song Saturday; The Fifth Element Music Video

  (1997) (RyoDrake Productions)

Being a lover of the weird, bizarre and wonderful, this iconic piece of film made a lasting impression on my. For me, this one song made the film, it’s a wonderfully magic morphing of bizarre SF fantasy and perfect opera. And wow……….what a costume
It is sang  by  Inva Mula  an Albanian opera soprano and actress whose mother and father were both opera singers, under their guidance she began her soprano career at an early age.
Mula is  best known to Western film goers as the voice of the Diva Plavalaguna in the film The Fifth Element, where she is credited as Inva Mulla Tchako. In the film (released in 1997) she performed the aria "Oh, giusto cielo!...Il dolce suono" (the mad scene) from Gaetano Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor, and "The Diva dance" song.
Director Luc Besson, admired  Maria Callas, but her 1950s EMI Classics recording of "Lucia" wasn't clear enough to use as a film soundtrack, so Callas's agent Michel Glotz, who had produced this recording, introduced him to Mula. The first video is the finished film version and the second video is the complete ‘green screen’ performance, some of which was cut from the film.
( information from Wikipedia)


Sunday 21 August 2011

East Mathers; Aug 2011




Have been out and about this weekend and we were blessed with good sunshine.

Friday 19 August 2011

Song saturday; Blue Skies



Today there are blue skies; don’t you just love blue skies? I’m off to do some more drawing over the weekend. Happy weekend every one.

Noah And The Whale Blue Skies 





ELO - Mr.Blue Sky (Original Promo)




Art Sunday; fabric art. ( as inspired by Kathy)







I’m away for the weekend but before I go here is a something that I’ve been thinking about these last few of days. We can thank Kathy and her inspirational ‘Bear & Pear’ for this post. In my conversations with her I began thinking about all the different types of ‘fabric art’ there are out there. Once you start looking its incredible how many artists are producing some type of art using fabrics, threads and beads. This is an art form I don’t think about very often, but thanks to Kathy. I’ve found myself thinking about it today.

These ( and the fabric figures above) are just a couple of the works found on this  site profiling many different artists who work with fabrics.



http://www.textilearts.net/directory/people_and_places/artists


And this is a selection of work by Jenni Cadman from her flickr site, showing her amazing collection of fabric art.




FROM
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jencad/


I couldn’t resist a few photos of vintage sewing machines,
I love these old machines. I can’t remember a time in my life when I didn’t own a sewing machine and many of them have been quite similar to these.

Even now I prefer my old treadle machine to the new all singing all dancing machines.
And talking of ‘all singing, all dancing’….. some music to finish up with.

Opening scene from a 40s musical starring Betty Hutton.

Hutton's most notable film role was the part of Annie Oakley in the 1950 musical of "Annie Get Your Gun." One of her best known songs, "Blow a Fuse" (later renamed "It's Oh So Quiet"), was covered by Icelandic artist, Bjork (Björk)



This haunting 1927 song of disillusionment and displacement is tenderly sung by Fanny Brice.She was a wonderful comedienne but she was also a fine 'torch' singer.




Bongwater was a college rock band formed by Ann Magnuson and Mark Kramer (boss of the Shimmy Disc record label) in 1985 and dissolved in 1992.This is a video for the song "Psychedelic Sewing Room" and was directed by Brad Dunning.



Tuesday 16 August 2011

Fields of corn




Just a few pictures of the corn that was growing every where. that area seems to concentrate on oil crops, the sunflowers were grown for oil and so is the corn. Fields and fields of corn growing in the red soil always looks good in the sun.

ruined rural buildings, France




These are some of the many ruined farm buildings found in South West France.I thought they would make good paintings

Sweet peas growing wild.




This tiny grey house is empty and in ned of total renovation. It stands next to my sisters house in France at the bottom of the lane. This was one of my favourite places to sit and draw while I was there. the sweet pears are glorious, many of the other flowers were past their best when I was there and in some places the landscape looked dry and bleached, but this little corner was a riot of colour.

Monday 15 August 2011

The English Riots, an attempt to understand




The English Riots, an attempt to understand

I watched the riots in utter disbelief. For me it was a slow realization that this was not a few angry idiots causing mayhem, it was something bigger, more widespread and deeply sinister, the thought of living with all that anger and anarchy erupting on your doorstep is terrifying. Watching scenes of mob violence a couple of hundred miles south had a completely different emotional impact to watching the same scene taking place in some far away land. Suddenly the world was not such a safe place and things that happen ‘over there’ were happening just a little too close for comfort. It didn't spread north of the border, the riots were very much 'English' riots not British riots, but it was closer than I ever want to be to that level of violence.  I watched the news reports, I listened to people being interviewed, I read the newspapers, I watched a live debate on TV but any real understanding escaped me. To a certain extent, it still does. This is my attempt at piecing it together and trying, not very successfully, to make sense of it.

Build up to the riots.

Thursday August 4, 2011; At 6pm Mark Duggan was  a passenger in a mini cab when he texted his partner ‘’the feds are following me’’. An hour earlier he had asked her to cook a meal for him and she was expecting him home to eat it, fifteen minutes after the text message he was dead. He had been shot twice in the chest and once in the arm by an officer from the Metropolitan police firearms squad. Duggan was said to be a well known associate of gang members and known criminals. He had been under investigation by the police at the time of the shooting. Initially the IPCC ( Independent Police Complaints Commission) falsely told journalists that Duggan had fired at the police. They have subsequently retracted that statement and  said there is ‘’no evidence that the handgun found at the scene was fired". In the 11 days that have passed since the shooting the IPCC have failed to confirm or deny that the hand gun found at the scene was in the possession of Duggan at the time of the shooting. At the time of the shooting members of the public are said to have claimed it was an ‘execution style’ killing. The press reported that the police were fired on by Duggan. There is still no public record of exactly what happened at the time of the shooting. The only person who could say with accuracy and without bias would be the mini cab driver, who we are told remains too deeply shocked  to make a statement. On the night of Mr Duggan’s death the police sent specially-trained family liaison officers to meet two of his close relatives. Mr Duggans parents were not contacted by the police and found out about the death from a TV news report. An inquest into Mr Duggan's death was opened at North London Coroner's Court in High Barnet but then adjourned until 12 December. No one knows why we have to wait so long for answers.
Saturday August 6, 2011 - Duggan's fiancee, Semone Wilson and other family members had arrived at Tottenham Police station in Tottenham at around 5pm on Saturday 6th August, with community leaders, to mount a vigil and pursue answers in relation to the killing. Only hours earlier she had been with 13 other family members to identify Duggan's body and pay their respects. The delay of more than 36 hours between his death and their being allowed to see him has not been explained by the IPCC, despite questions from the Guardian. The protesters had gathered in Tottenham High Street and gradually made their way toward the police station where it is believed Semone Wilson was already attempting to contact a senior police officer. The intend was a peaceful demonstration, they wanted answers regarding Duggans death and they refuted police allegations that Duggan  was a ‘gangster’, claiming instead that he was a peaceful, non-violent family man and father of four. By 5pm on Saturday 200-300 people had joined the demonstration and were gathered outside the police station. At 8.30 that evening the violence began when stones and missiles were thrown and two police cars were set on fire. Some reports claim this was following a disagreement between one of the protesters and a member of the police.

Trying to collate the hundreds of media reports into one coherent story is virtually impossible because there are so many versions of the same story, all slightly different in detail and inference

Much of this information was taken from, BBC News http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-14459516 , The  Sunday Telegraph 14th, The Guardian 7th & 8th August and The Evening Standard 9th August. 
The Riots
The following is a timeline of the riots as reported by
The BBC's Andy Moore.
Riots in London and around the country have seen widespread looting and buildings set alight. Dozens were left homeless after a night of riots on the streets of Tottenham on Saturday after the  peaceful demonstration over the shooting.  Here is a timeline of what happened.
Saturday 6th August
Volence continues through the night in Tottenham. Rioters attack banks and loot shops.
20:45 BST - The London Fire Brigade receives its first calls to attend
22:45 BST - As the violence continues, a double-decker bus is burnt out and more petrol bombs are thrown at police and buildings. Shops set alight in the area include an Aldi supermarket and a carpet shop.
Looting is reported throughout the night and some thieves take the opportunity to load up car boots and shopping trolleys with stolen goods. Vision Express, Boots, Argos and JD Sports are among the shops affected.

04:30 BST the following morning has dealt with 49 "primary" fires in the Tottenham area and received more than 250 emergency calls from the public.
No firefighters are injured in the disturbances but some are threatened by rioters, according to the London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority.

Sunday 7th August
Violence spreads to Enfield in Northeast London. Shortly after, missiles are thrown in Brixton, south London. Rioters loot stores and destroy vehicles.
Local MP David Lammy tells reporters the community has "had the heart ripped out of it" by "mindless, mindless people", many of whom, he says, had come from outside Tottenham to cause trouble.
Police condemn a wave of "copycat criminal activity" across London
12:00 BST - Fire crews have all the fires under control but are still damping down some burnt-out buildings. Scenes of crime officers begin investigating and gathering evidence.
Police say 26 police officers were injured in the riots and two remain in hospital. In total, 55 arrests have been made.
16:20 BST - Police announce the launch of Operation Withern to investigate the riots in Tottenham.
18:28 BST - Police are called to High Street Enfield after reports shop windows are being smashed. A police vehicle is damaged.
18:30 BST - Three police officers are injured after intervening in an altercation in Brixton, south London. Missiles are thrown.
19:45 BST - Around 100 hooded youths gather outside Enfield Police Station.
21:30 BST -The Guardian newspaper quotes a source as saying a bullet found in a police radio after Mr Duggan's death was police issue.
22:00 BST - More reports of shop windows being smashed in Enfield. Riot police and mounted police patrol the streets.
22:30 BST - Reports on Twitter of a police presence at Oxford Circus in London's West End. Police later say a mob of around 50 people damaged property in the area.
Monday 8th August
Police say they are dealing with "copycat criminality" across London.
-- Violence spreads to Hackney, northeast London and Clapham, an upmarket area in southwest London. Rioting follows in Ealing in the west and Woolwich in the east. London Mayor Boris Johnson says he will cut short his holiday and return to the capital.
-- Looting and violence spread to Britain's second biggest city Birmingham. Large fires break out in Croydon, south London.
00:45 BST - Six fire engines and 30 firefighters are despatched to a blaze at a Foot Locker store on Brixton Road, after it is set alight.
Three officers are injured after being hit by a vehicle in Chingford Mount, Waltham Forest. The officers had been making arrests after a shop was looted.
Police say a police vehicle windscreen was smashed during a disturbance in Islington and a Tesco store in Ponders End has been vandalised and looted.
02:20 BST - Scotland Yard says police are responding to copycat criminal activity across London. In a statement it says "small and mobile groups" of looters have been have been targeting areas of north, east and south London.
Police say gangs of youths are continuing to attack officers and shops are being targeted in Waltham Forest.
In Enfield, the High Street remains cordoned off after disorder in the area was contained. The situation in Walthamstow is said to be under control after some 30 youths - many in masks - vandalised and looted shops there.
02:38 BST - The London Fire Brigade says firefighters have been called to a number of fires as a direct result of disturbances in the Enfield, Brixton and Walthamstow areas. Six fire engines and 30 firefighters are fighting a blaze at a shop on Brixton road.
06:15 BST - The Metropolitan Police say a further 100 arrests have been made and 16 people charged in relation to disturbances overnight on Sunday.
17:19 BST - Skirmishes break out between police and groups of young people in Hackney. The trouble reportedly started when a man was stopped and searched by police, but nothing was found.
17:39 BST - Spokesman for Mayor of London Boris Johnson says he is interrupting his family holiday to return to the capital to deal with the situation.
18:45 BST - Video footage from Lewisham, south London, shows a fire burning in a street where at least one vehicle has been set ablaze.
18:42 BST - Transport for London says a bus has been set on fire in Peckham, south-east London.
20:07 BST - West Midlands Police say some shop windows have been smashed in various locations, with property stolen.
20:58 BST - Aerial footage is now showing several fires burning in Croydon, south London.
21:33 BST - The Prime Minister is to cut short his holiday because the situation has "demonstrably worsened", it is reported.
21:50 BST - A BBC correspondent reports seeing a fire burning in Clapham High Street but he can't see any police besides a police roadblock further up the road.
22:42 BST - Essex and Suffolk Police confirm they have sent officers to London to assist Metropolitan Police colleagues.
23:05 BST - A BBC producer reports that phone shops are being looted in Woolwich High Street. He says there are several hundred youths involved, but there are no police around. There is also a burnt-out police car.
23:27 BST - Rioting is taking place in Ealing, west London, where the windows of a Tesco supermarket have been put out, a car is on fire and rubbish is strewn in public areas. There is also a fire in Haven Green park, opposite Ealing Broadway Tube.
23:30 BST - About 40 vehicles were damaged in a night of violence in Nottingham described by one senior officer as "motivated" by the London riots. Most of the incidents happened in the St Ann's area, but police foiled an attempt to break into the Victoria Centre in the city centre. The trouble lasted about three hours.
23:49 BST - Labour leader Ed Miliband is returning early from his holiday in Devon because of the riots, it is reported. He is due back in London on Tuesday morning.
Tuesday 9th August
Rioting continues through the night in several parts of the capital. A police station is set alight in Birmingham and officers are called to a number of incidents in the northwest port city of Liverpool.
Cameron condemns the disorder as "criminality pure and simple." He says there will be 16,000 police on the streets of the capital.
-- Cameron visits Croydon to see the damage from the previous night's violence. Johnson visits Clapham to thank volunteers for cleaning up.
-- In Salford, Greater Manchester, rioters throw bricks at police and set fire to buildings. A police station is firebombed by 30 to 40 males in Nottingham. Cars are burned and stores looted in West Bromwich and Wolverhampton in central England.
Youths were involved in rioting in the centre of Manchester and in Salford
00:45 BST - West Midlands Police confirm that a police station in Holyhead Road in Handsworth, Birmingham, is on fire
00:59 BST - Merseyside Police confirm they are dealing with a number of incidents in South Liverpool, including cars being set alight.
01:05 BST - BBC staff member reports hundreds of youths ransacking a Panasonic store in West Ealing - no sign of police.
01:21 BST - The Metropolitan Police issue on their current operations across London. It includes the following bulletins - Hackney: 250-300 people gathered in Pembury Estate, setting alight cars and throwing petrol bombs. Businesses in Mare Street were looted and officers contained the situation. Three officers injured but their condition is not believed to be serious. Newham: Looting in Stratford High Street. Lewisham: Roaming groups of youths were involved in disorder. Bethnal Green: More than 100 people looted a Tesco supermarket. Two officers were injured. Croydon: Fires burning at a number of premises, including a very large blaze at a sofa factory.
03:06 BST - London Fire Brigade lists the major blazes is it fighting in the capital: 1. Timber yard fire ongoing in East Ham on Plashet Grove. Four fire engines and 20 firefighters on site. 2. Shopping centre and offices of four floors fire on Woolwich New Road. Whole of the ground floor is alight. 20 firefighters attending. 3. The fire on Lavender Hill now has eight fire engines and 40 firefighters at the scene. Most of the ground floor and part of first floor alight. 4. 40 firefighters at a fire in a warehouse on Solar Way in Enfield.
09:43 BST - London Fire Brigade says it faced its busiest night in recent history. The brigade's 999 control centre answered 2,169 calls between 18:00 BST on Monday and 07:19 BST on Tuesday. This is around 15 times the normal rate of calls the brigade would expect on an average day.
09:55 BST - The Football Association confirms that England's friendly against Holland at Wembley tomorrow has been called off because of the rioting in London.
11:06 BST - David Cameron makes his first statement outside Number 10 after cutting short his holiday to return to London. He announces a massive increase in police numbers and the recall of Parliament.
14:15 BST - Prime Minister David Cameron visits Croydon to view the devastation from Monday's violence and looting.
14:45 BST - London Mayor Boris Johnson visits Clapham Junction to thank volunteers for clearning up the damage and apologise to those who have lost their businesses. He is heckled by angry residents who say there were inadequate police on the streets.
15:24 BST - Scotland Yard says 525 people have been arrested in relation to the riots. Ninety-nine people have been charged so far - of those 63 face burglary charges.
17:29 BST - The Independent Police Complaints commission says ballistic test results show no evidence that a hangun found at the scene of the fatal police shooting of Mark Duggan had been fired.
17:46 BST - Reports of rocks and stones being hurled at police vans by gangs of youths in Salford, Manchester.
19:28 BST - Manchester police appeal for calm following a number of attacks by rioters on shops in Manchester city centre and Salford. There are also reports of trouble in Birmingham and West Bromwich where there have been confrontations between police and gangs of youths.
22:36 BST - A police station in Nottingham is firebombed by a group of rioters. In the Bootle area of Merseyside a man is arrested on suspicion of vehicle theft after allegedly using a dumper truck to break into a Post Office.
Wednesday 10th August
In Birmingham, police launch a murder inquiry after three Muslim men are killed in a hit and run car incident. One person is arrested.
-- "We will not allow a culture of fear to exist on our streets." "We needed a fight back and a fight back is under way," Cameron says after a meeting of the government's COBRA crisis planning group.
-- A surge in police numbers and heavy rain in many places help to calm streets in London, although missiles are thrown at police in Eltham in south London.
Courts across the country stay open through the night to deal with cases
04:00 BST - Avon and Somerset Police say four people have been arrested following disorder in Bristol city centre.
05:37 BST - A murder investivation is launched in Birmingham after two men are killed and one critically injured in a hit and run incident. The third man later died in hospital. It is not known if the deaths were linked to the rioting.
09:13 BST - A 21-year-old man is arrested on suspicion of starting a fire at the House of Reeves furniture store in Croydon - destroyed during Monday night's rioting in London.
11:15 BST - Prime Minister David Cameron makes a statement from Downing Street, paying tribute to police and the emergency services. He warns that more people will be arrested and charged. He said: "We will not allow a culture of fear to exist on our streets." Mr Cameron also said there were contingency plans for water cannon to be used at 24 hours' notice.
13:43 BST - Ministry of Justice statement says there are enough prison places for all those sentenced to custody. The Met Police release a second tranches of images of people they would like to speak to about the recent disorder. Greater Manchester Police release a batch of CCTV images of suspects wanted in connection with the rioting and looting.
14:44 BST - Scotland's First Minister, Alex Salmond, says 250 police officers have been dispatched from Scotland to the Midlands and the north of England to help combat the rioting.
16:31 BST - The Association of Chief Police Officers - which is co-ordinating the transfer of police officers, dogs, horses and other riot equipment - says six forces have requested assistance tonight. They are: Avon and Somerset, Gloucestershire, Greater Manchester Police, Metropolitan Police, Nottinghamshire and West Midlands. Fifty-one forces across the UK are helping supply the extra officers and equipment.
17:59 BST: - In London, the number of people arrested in connection with violence, disorder and looting rises to 805, with 251 charged, Scotland Yard says.
18
:19 BST:- Greater Manchester Police's twitter feed confirms that two men have been sentenced to 10 weeks and 16 weeks over rioting.
19:36 BST - Tariq Jahan, whose 21-year-old son, Haroon, died after he was run over by a car in Birmingham, has called for people not to resort to vigilantism against rioters and asked his community to ''stand united".
21:51 BST - Scotland Yard has named the 26-year-old man who died after being found shot in a car during riots in Croydon as Trevor Ellis, of Brixton Hill.
22:03 BST - In a statement, West Midlands Police say the situation across the area is calm at the moment as 1,000 officers parade the streets.
23:55 BST - Magistrates courts in London, Solihull and Manchester among others stay open through the night to fast track those already in custody for disorder related offences.
Thursday 11 August
Courts in several cities, including in London, Solihull and Manchester, work through the night to deal with those arrested.
-- Parliament is recalled and Cameron says he will keep a higher police presence of 16,000 officers on London streets through the weekend and will give police powers to demand the removal of face masks or other coverings if their wearers are suspected of crime.
-- Cameron tells parliament police tactics had failed at the start of the rioting. The Association of Chief Police Officers head, Hugh Orde, says "The fact that politicians chose to come back is an irrelevance in terms of the tactics that were by then developing."
-- A Premier League match between Tottenham and Everton at White Hart Lane, to be played on August 13, is postponed, amid fears of further unrest.
-- Richard Mannington Bowes, who was injured an attack in Ealing on August 8, becomes the fifth person to die because of the riots. A 22-year-old man has been arrested.
01:50 BST - A candle-lit vigil held in Birmingham at the spot where three men were killed on Wednesday night when they were hit by a car passes off peacefully. About 250 people took part. Police have been given more time to question a 32-year-old man on suspicion of murder
06:27 BST - The Metropolitan Police say the total number of arrests in London is now 888 in connection with the rioting and looting - and of those, 371 have been charged. London and other cities affected by the recent rioting have remained largely calm overnight.
10:00 BST - MPs have been recalled from their summer break for an emergency debate on the riots.
10:57 BST - Housing minister Grant Shapps says 100 families have been made homeless following the disturbances. He says he is looking at measures to prevent rioters from being given social housing.
11:15 BST - The Premier League match between Tottenham and Everton at White Hart Lane, scheduled for this weekend has been postponed, amid fears of further unrest.
11:30 BST - Prime Minister David Cameron makes a statement to MPs in which he admits there are questions to be answered over the shooting of Mark Duggan in Tottenham last week. He calls the rioting "criminality, pure and simple" and says the courts will continue sitting for as long as necessary to deal with the extra cases. He says police will be given powers to force people to remove masks and scarves covering their faces where there are reasonable grounds to believe they are planning criminal activity. Mr Cameron also announces a £10m recovery scheme to make areas safe and clean again.
11:55 BST - Labour leader Ed Miliband calls for an inquiry to look at the deeper causes of the "wanton vandalism and looting". He says the riots have been a "stark reminder" of the need for police on the streets and he calls on the government to rethink cuts in police spending.
17:02 BST - MPs are continuing their debate in the Commons - it has now been extended until 20:00 to ensure everyone gets their say.
August 12th
Steve Kavanagh, deputy assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, says 16,000 officers will remain on duty in the capital on August 13.
-- The Metropolitan Police say they have arrested 1,051 people in connection with the violence and looting around London - 591 people have been charged. West Midlands police have made 467 arrests since the violence began with around 100 being charged.


The Aftermath of the Riots
The Government has responded by promising to be ‘tough on crime’, they have promised to ensure those charged with related offences go through the court system as quickly as possible and face heavy penalties for their involvement. They are also looking at ways to withdraw benefits and evict people who are housed in social housing.
So far the Government has not responded positively to those who point to social deprivation, inequality, police victimization of the black community and lack of opportunity as underlying causes of the riots. They have recognized the growing problem of gang culture in inner cities but failed to ask why gang culture continues to grow.
Their promise to be ‘tough on crime’ is being kept with ruthless efficiency,  what we are actually seeing is prison sentencing for people who have been given a couple of items of looted clothing, or a couple of stolen DVDs.
But ‘tough on crime’ has also led to some of the most violent criminals being apprehended; hopefully they will be processed by the courts quickly and efficiently.

Some cases make very strange reading; like the case of Ellese Elliot, who graduated with a first class Degree in Philosophy from Greenwich University, who has been offered a place on a post grad MSc course in the philosophy of mental disorder, who is very vocal in her campaign to save her Universities threatened philosophy course and who currently writes for the socialist newspapers Solidarity and Workers liberty. Ellese was accused of handling two mobile phones that were stolen. She appeared in court and pleaded not guilty. Another strange case was the young mother of two who slept through the riots only to be offered a new pair of shorts from a friend the following day. She was found guilty of handling stolen goods and sentenced to six months in prison. Some of this ‘tough on crime’ begins to feel more like revenge than justice. I’m more than happy to see the violent thugs who killed, maimed, burnt, looted and destroyed communities dealt with severely, but I’m beginning to wonder if the courts are actually dealing with the right people.

As for the Governments proposal to withdraw benefits from those convicted of riot related crime, I don’t see how that can work. For a start, any one who goes to prison loses all benefits anyway, so no need to find new ways to take it from them; you can’t take the same thing twice from any one no matter how angry you are with them. If the proposal is to withdraw benefits from those convicted of crime but not sentenced to prison, I don’t see how that will work either. If a convicted person loses his/her benefit in addition to a court imposed punishment he/she will be punished twice but a person not on benefit will only be punished once. And that’s without going into the damaging effects of pushing poor people ( and more importantly their wife and kids) into the kind of poverty that’s not known in this country, poverty where there is nothing, no money, no food, no rent and no hope.

The one proposal that really made me angry was the proposal to evict people convicted of riot related crime from their council houses (social housing). I listened to Mr Cameron claim that ‘social housing is subsidized’ and no one should live in ‘subsidized housing’ if they (or any one living with them) were involved in the riots. Another flawed proposal. Social housing is not subsidized, most social housing is now owned by housing associations that are unsubsidized, non-profit making organizations, required by law to break even at the end of every financial year. Social housing still owned by local authorities is also required to break even at the end of each financial year.The reason most people assume social housing is subsidized is because no one makes a profit from it which makes it much cheaper to rent than comparable houses in the private sector. Private landlords either have huge mortgages to pay (making a nice profit for the banks) and/or they own rental properties as a business and use the profit as income. The cost of social housing is the ‘real’ cost of housing without costing in the ‘profit margins’. I’m pretty sure Mr Cameron knows this, he just choose to go along with a commonly held (false) belief. And even if it were subsidized, making families homeless doesn’t help any one, especially the children of the rioters. Plus of course using eviction as an added punishment would only be just if it could be used against every one, which it couldn’t, it would be reserved for ‘social housing’ tenants who are of course the poorer members of society.

We have watched gangs of masked thugs methodically strip shops and businesses of stock, we have seen people grabbing as much as they can as quickly as they can and feeling no remorse.  That’s not surprising, we live in a society that values wealth and material possession over and above every thing else, we are positively encouraged to live beyond our means and constantly told that a mans worth is measured by his wealth. Many of these people live in run down estates with no opportunity and no hope, but they live their lives within sight of the richest people in the country. From their run down homes they are with in walking distance of Canary Warf. Their loyalties are with their gangs, not with the rest of society and that is very dangerous for the rest of us.


When I watched the riots erupt on our televisions I was as angry/ frightened/ confused etc as the next person. I thought what every one else was thinking no excuses, no reasons, just a bunch of violent, criminal thugs etc. I still think that, after what we saw there is no justification.
But if our politicians don’t start to listen to what these people are saying no amount of ‘tough on crime’, will make this problem of ours go away.

I think, they will ignore this at their peril.










 

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Saturday 13 August 2011

A good nights sleep; Fry and laurie

Ohhhhhhhhhhh still not sleeping........................But its a good excuse for a bit of vintage Fry and Laurie

Just spend a very pleasant but unexpected week in my daughters company, she came to stay. It kept me busy and it was so nice to see her again. Now she's gone, insomnia seems to be taking over....................oh well at least tomorrow (today) is Sunday and I don't have to get up. :-)

Art Sunday; Guatemala



Todays Art Sunday is a celebration of Guatemala


Most of the paintings, photographs and information can be found here

http://www.artemaya.com/index.html




Paintings by  Mario Gonzalez Chavajay

 Maya artists Mario Gonzalez Chavajay  is the emerging Tz'utuhil Maya artist.  He comes fromm a family of artists, his grandfather is the first Tz'utuhil artist, Rafael Gonzalez y Gonzalez, and he is younger brother of Pedro Rafael Gonzalez Chavajay. Mario has been painting for more than twenty years.
He
takes his work very seriously, works hard and paints for at least eight hours every day.







Two of his painting
s were exhibited with the exhibition, ‘The Courtly Art of the Ancient Maya, at the Fine arts museum of San Francisco.’ His paintings and those of his brother were the only modern works shown with the ancient Maya artifacts. He was among the Guatemalan artists invited to the United States for the opening of the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian,

http://www.nmai.si.edu/

and one of his paintings is in their permanent collection.

Unlike most Tz’utuhil artists coming out of one family, Mario did not learn from his brother or father. He learned by painting on his own. For many years he painted specifically for the tourist industry. His work was popular with the tourists, very marketable and in high demand. He sold from the Salvador Reanda’s gallery in Santiago Atitlán. His capacity to produce these colourful, simplistic pictures filled a growing niche in the market. His sense of color and design made him the most saleable of all the artists, who painted for the tourist art galleries. In 2000 Mario stopped working for the tourist market and began exclusively painting original themes.

His painting soon c
hanged from the typical tourist work to paintings set in lush tropical forests depicting the traditional Maya way of life.





























Mario is one of  the hardest working of all the Tz’utuhil artists and certainly among the most promising emerging artists.



































For over two millennium, Maya cloth and clothing have served as artistic expressions.

There is a kind of  visual literacy to these textiles; one must be able to "read" cloth and the manner in which it is worn. The clothing worn by the indigenous people makes an immediate impression. It’s handwoven and embroidered in rainbow colors with geometric, floral, animal, or human designs.



These traditional textiles are still produced on hand looms by weavers for the indigenous markets but the same weavers can adapt their methods and techniques to produce goods for the tourist markets.