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Climate Change
Blog Archive
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▼
2011
(1596)
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▼
July
(138)
- Don't forget the barbed wire
- The system doesn't work any more
- All the news not fit to print
- The threat does not go away
- Not unrelated
- Fear
- The lies they tell
- A good start
- Always a reason
- Eleven weeks' borrowing
- Under our noses
- Not "deniers" but "dissenters"
- The only acceptable diagnosis
- This is getting stupid
- All the motivation you will ever need
- Any goo will do
- They know not what to do
- The Parasite Class
- The slide into decline
- Inevitability
- The generals finally share the blame
- You can't defy gravity
- Close down the blogs
- Back in business
- The threat of the individual?
- A rational act?
- No need to argue
- Struggling for answers
- Life in six-minute chunks
- The least he can do
- It's all de fault of ... somebody
- Internal server error
- Headlines I would like to see
- The good old days
- Then and now
- Three years to the day
- Questions
- Not good enough
- Not a dent in him
- The wind is sown
- Reason departed
- Failure writ large
- How Hacking Started
- The smell of death
- Lovely people
- Noted By Madame Defarge - 7
- A grand old tradition
- Delete "Armed Forces"
- Nothing yet will change
- Riding the tiger
- Is there no end
- Get on with it
- They can't even resign properly
- Noted By Madame Defarge - 6
- An unrecognised fracture
- It isn't
- Mr "Facing Both Ways"
- Noted By Madame Defarge - 5
- A Soylent Green moment
- No way back
- Noted By Madame Defarge - 4
- The band leader resigns
- Littlejohn
- An international phenomenon
- Meanwhile
- The symptoms, not the cause
- Noted By Madame Defarge - 3
- The Army looks after its own
- Sweet 'n' sour
- Germans not doing enough in Libya, shock
- Delicious
- The new normality
- Up a Gumtree?
- Noted By Madame Defarge - 2
- Self delusion
- On a path to destruction
- Support your politicians
- Noted By Madame Defarge
- A short interlude
- A light touch
- Stolen from our pockets
- Of glass houses and stones
- More Europe
- Meanwhile
- Take an article Miss Failygraph
- Well, we're totally shocked
- Opportunities lost
- Past neglect
- Double bubble
- Carbon dictator
- Back to unreality
- Back in the real world
- Rise of the mega blogs?
- A dose of unreality
- Booker: a question of history
- Power and responsibilities
- Squeaky voices
- Is the "great" off the menu then?
- Doomed to failure
- Humbug
- The brothel keepers
- An interesting business model
- A moment of shame
- An absence of history
- Will the real Peter Oborne stand up?
- You next
- A way in
- Deliberate or just plain stupid?
- You don't say
- Another power grab
- They did it
- Seriously??
- Just the sort of crap
- Booker
- Where have they been?
- The European idea
- Euroscepticism – but not as we know it
- Trawling for truth
- Pre-emptive strike
- Strike, baby! Strike!
- Er ... excuse me?
- Lost it!
- Say no more
- How they all lie to us
- Hidden Europe
- A hugely ironic inversion
- What is royalty for?
- A mandatory qualification?
- I think we knew this
- Nose bleeds
- Our monstrous MPs
- Forever failing to perform
- No longer news
- Count the teaspoons
- That's democracy?
- The tramlines of Referism
- Unreality
- Churnalism almost wins out
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▼
July
(138)
As the saga of the Edinburgh tramway continues, we now hear that councillors have decided on what they consider to be the least worst option – throwing more money at the project, rather than cancelling it.
Considering that cancellation will have cost taxpayers £750 million, the councillors seem to have come up with a completely new set of figures which allow them to claim that another, new, washes-whiter truncated scheme would only cost £774 million, and make an operating profit of £2 million a year. Whether that includes servicing the debt is not specified.
With a scheme that was supposed to cost no more than £500 million when it was approved, and is now running three years behind schedule, the public could be forgiven for taking a rather jaundiced view of the judgement of their civic leaders, the council being run by the Lib-Dims, who share power with the Scots Nats.
Breaking ranks, though, is the SNP's deputy city council leader Steve Cardownie. He opposes the scheme and has proposed a referendum, to allow the public to make the decision on the future of the tramway, rather than proven inadequate who run the council.
Needless to say, the idea has been rejected by the ruling élites. Cardownie says he was "obviously disappointed" by the decision, adding: "All options had a price tag but we maintained that the Edinburgh public should determine which one they preferred".
In a crucial statement, he then says: "We think it's inherently undemocratic not to give the Edinburgh people a voice in this matter. It's their money which is going to bridge the funding gap and it should have been up to them to decide".
And therein lie the tramlines of Referism. Cardownie is very clearly acknowledging that the confidence trick of allowing the public to elect their rulers – from a very limited gene pool – is not sufficient to confer democracy. What really matters is the power to control how the money is spent.
Control over the money is always at the root of power, which is why the EU is currently seeking ways of raising taxes independently of the member states. It is also why, if we are ever to have a functioning democracy, we the people must have a formalised right to decide on how much money is raised, and how it is spent.
However, referendums on individual budget items would be expensive and complex, but an annual referendum on the global budget is a good alternative, and a change that would be easily implemented – the general idea of an annual referendum having already been piloted successfully in respect of Council Tax. That is Referism ... an idea whose time has come.
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