Journal Entries
Sort-of Fame in the Family
Posted Mar 31, 2003
Whilst visiting my dear old Mum on Mother's Day I discovered that there is a road somewhere named after my Grandad.
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Latest reply: Mar 31, 2003
Sick of Slogans
Posted Mar 19, 2003
The whole "War with Iraq" thing has got me realising something else I am sick to the back teeth of - political slogans. Not only are they incredibly irritating, but seem like a feeble excuse to not have your own opinion or insight into a situation. Don't understand the complexities of Middle East politics? - chant "NO WAR FOR OIL". No thinking required, just a nice, easy-to-understand slogan you can shout.
Although I think there *is* some good in the anti-war movement (It's certainly not malicious, and it's good that someone is standing up to Blair's cynical autocracy) the amount of sloganeering involved is depressing. Many of those interviewed at these demos are asked their opinion and end up simply spinning these slogans into a sentence - "We are here today because we want to tell Blair and Bush that we do not want *a war for oil*. This is *not in our name*". The politics are also hand-me-down simplistic - war is always bad, Palestinians are only ever victims, America is the world's only aggressor. At the recent London rally, Reverend Jesse Jackson dispensed with old fashioned rhetoric altogether and instead chanted some simple pacifist slogans to the crowd. The crowd simply chanted along with him. Once, these sort of things were about free-thinking and new ideas. Now they are like benign Nurenburg Rallys - a place to merge into a psychological collective, without having to think for yourself.
Discuss this Journal entry [1]
Latest reply: Mar 19, 2003
Sick of Slogans
Posted Mar 19, 2003
The whole "War with Iraq" thing has got me realising something else I am sick to the back teeth of - political slogans. Not only are they incredibly irritating, but seem like a feeble excuse to not have your own opinion or insight into a situation. Don't understand the complexities of Middle East politics? - chant "NO WAR FOR OIL". No thinking required, just a nice, easy-to-understand slogan you can shout.
Although I think there *is* some good in the anti-war movement (It's certainly not malicious, and it's good that someone is standing up to Blair's cynical autocracy) the amount of sloganeering involved is depressing. Many of those interviewed at these demos are asked their opinion and end up simply spinning these slogans into a sentence - "We are here today because we want to tell Blair and Bush that we do not want *a war for oil*. This is *not in our name*". The politics are also hand-me-down simplistic - war is always bad, Palestinians are only ever victims, America is the world's only aggressor. At the recent London rally, Reverend Jesse Jackson dispensed with old fashioned rhetoric altogether and instead chanted some simple pacifist slogans to the crowd. The crowd simply chanted along with him. Once, these sort of things were about free-thinking and new ideas. Now they are a little like benign Nurenburg Rallys - a place to merge into a psychological collective, without having to think for yourself.
Discuss this Journal entry [1]
Latest reply: Mar 19, 2003
Sick
Posted Mar 19, 2003
The whole "War with Iraq" thing has got me realising something else I am sick to the back teeth of - political slogans. Not only are they incredibly irritating, but seem like a feeble excuse to not have your own opinion or insight into a situation. Don't understand the complexities of Middle East politics? - chant "NO WAR FOR OIL". No thinking required, just a nice, easy-to-understand slogan you can shout.
Although I think there *is* some good in the anti-war movement (It's certainly not malicious, and it's good that someone is standing up to Blair's cynical autocracy) the amount of sloganeering involved is depressing. Many of those interviewed at these demos are asked their opinion and end up simply spinning these slogans into a sentence - "We are here today because we want to tell Blair and Bush that we do not want *a war for oil*. This is *not in our name*". The politics are also hand-me-down simplistic - war is always bad, Palestinians are only ever victims, America is the world's only aggressor. At the recent London rally, Reverend Jesse Jackson dispensed with old fashioned rhetoric altogether and instead chanted some simple pacifist slogans to the crowd. The crowd simply chanted along with him. Once, these sort of things were about free-thinking and new ideas. Now they are like benign Nurenburg Rallys - a place to merge into a psychological collective, without having to think for yourself.
Discuss this Journal entry [1]
Latest reply: Mar 19, 2003
Sick of Slogans
Posted Mar 15, 2003
The whole "War with Iraq" thing has got me realising something else I am sick to the back teeth of - political slogans. Not only are they incredibly irritating, but seem like a feeble excuse to not have your own opinion or insight into a situation. Don't understand the complexities of Middle East politics? - chant "NO WAR FOR OIL". No thinking required, just a nice, easy-to-understand slogan you can shout.
Although I think there *is* some good in the anti-war movement (It's certainly not malicious, and it's good that someone is standing up to Blair's cynical autocracy) the amount of sloganeering involved is depressing. Many of those interviewed at these demos are asked their opinion and end up simply spinning these slogans into a sentence - "We are here today because we want to tell Blair and Bush that we do not want *a war for oil*. This is *not in our name*". The politics are also hand-me-down simplistic - war is always bad, Palestinians are only ever victims, America is the world's only aggressor. At the recent London rally, Reverend Jesse Jackson dispensed with old fashioned rhetoric altogether and instead chanted some simple pacifist slogans to the crowd. The crowd simply chanted along with him. Once, these sort of things were about free-thinking and new ideas. Now they are like benign Nurenburg Rallys - a place to merge into a psychological collective, without having to think for yourself.
Discuss this Journal entry [2]
Latest reply: Mar 15, 2003
Mister Matty
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