Monthly Archives: April 2013

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President Michael D Higgins addressing the EU Parliament in Strasbourg today.

They’re calling it Squee’s Ode to Freedom.

The logistical strand of economics which today holds sway and stands as a hegemonic model of economic theory, not only in Europe, is the flaw of our times. This strand of neoclassical economics is of course useful for limited and defined tasks. It is insufficient however as an approach for our problems and our future. We need new substantive pluralist political economic models and an emancipatory discourse to deliver them, and I suggest that this is possible.

The role of public intellectuals is also an urgent one. They are called upon, I suggest, to state publicly and unequivocally that the problems of Europe are not simply technical, and certainly not solely amenable to solution by technocratic measures at the expense of democratic accountability. The suggestion that citizens and their representatives are not fiscally or economically literate enough to carry the decision making necessary for policies that impinge on their lives – be it unemployment, housing, health, education or the environment – has the most serious implications in legitimacy terms. It is an assumption that challenges democracy itself.

-…If we were, as an alternative, to regard our people merely as dependent variables to the opinions of rating agencies, agencies unaccountable to any demos, and indeed found to be fallible on occasion, then instead of being citizens we would be reduced to the status of mere consumers; pawns in a speculative chess board of fiscal moves in a game derived from assumptions that are weak, untestable or more frequently undeclared.

 

Full credit (rating) though, in fairness.

Full speech here.

(Michel Christian/Photocall Ireland)

soc2soc1soc4soc3Scenes from the Margaret Thatcher funeral today in London.

“Her later remark about there being no such thing as ‘society’ has been misunderstood and refers to some impersonal entity to which we are tempted to surrender our independence.”

 

And she didn’t like the competition.

The too-bloody Right Rev Richard Chartres, Bishop of London, at Margaret Thatcher’s funeral.

Thatcher funeral crowd shows little sentimentality, or dissent, at St Paul’s (Patrick Barkham, Guardian)

(Pics: Telegraph/Getty)

Jack

Economics correspondent of The Guardian, Phillip Inman, writes about the Croke Park II deal which was declared “dead” by SIPTU president Jack O’Connor, above, yesterday.

“A plan to slash €1bn (£860m) from the public service pay bill over three years has just been rejected by unions, plunging the Fine Gael/Labour government into crisis. The deal  was supposed to be sealed by July, but with further negotiations and ballots necessary to get the cuts plan back on track, and with union opposition hardening, the government may be forced to carry out a threatened 7% across-the-board cut in pay.”

“The €1bn in savings is part of the Irish government’s deal with Brussels and the IMF and must be implemented if the government is to comply with rules that govern how much it receives in bailout funds.”

“It was always going to be tough to persuade public sector workers to accept a pay cut when much of Irish society remains unreconstructed from the corrupt boom years and the bankers, property developers and professionals who benefited handsomely before 2008 appear to have gone unpunished.”

“For many public service workers the 7% cut is just the latest attack on their living standards. For some, it will add up to a 25% fall in incomes since 2008.”

“The so-called Croke Park II deal that broke down on Tuesday is more nuanced, but includes pay cuts for all as a central measure.”

“It is possible the Irish government will find a fudge that keeps the IMF and Brussels at bay. But it shows the tensions that remain inside the eurozone, which, with its austerity obsession intact, is likely to suffer many more convulsions.”

Cyprus was just for starters – Ireland could provide the main course (The Guardian)

Croke Park II is dead by €300million savings problem remains (Irish Times)

Mark Stedman/Photocall Ireland

magnaputty

Sure. You can squeeze it and squish it and make little sculptures out of it.

But put magnetic putty in the vicinity of a strong magnetic field and it will animate, oozing forwards to engulf the magnetised object.

This (admittedly speeded-up) video from PBS Studios and Shanks FX (a compilation of special effects from their recent film SCI-FLY) should leave you in no two minds about the existence of The Blob.

Where is your God now?

Buy some here.

colossal

Picture 1

Watch what happens when the Marriage (Definition of Marriage) Amendment Bill is passed in New Zealand’s parliament in Wellington.

Wait for it.

It’s a Maori love song called Pokarekare Ana.

Which, according to Wikipedia:

The tune of “Pokarekare Ana” has been borrowed for an Irish hymn to the Blessed Virgin: “A Mhuire Mháthair, sé seo mo ghuí”

 

New Zealand legalises same-sex marriage (Guardian)