Showing posts with label Daily Express. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daily Express. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 June 2021

Disability Is Analogue Not Digital. by Les May

IN March of this year the Daily Express published four pictures of Paul McCartney struggling to rise from a lying position to a sitting position on a Caribbean beach. They were captioned by ‘Help! I need somebody’ and ‘Twist and clout’ in an attempt at humour. McCartney is the same age as me and in my experience there is nothing particularly amusing about trying to get up from the ground or floor if there isn’t something conveniently placed to give a bit of support. That’s why every so often someone who lives alone is found dead or severely dehydrated after a fall. McCartney’s face did not suggest he found it terribly amusing either.
I’m not going to suggest that the pictures were ‘offensive’ or generate some synthetic outrage in the hopes of provoking a ‘Twitter Storm’, but I am doubtful that the paper would have published similar pictures of some well known figure struggling to rise from a wheelchair. A wheelchair says ‘disabled’ and no one wants to to be accused of mocking the disabled. There’s even talk of making such boorishness a ‘hate crime’.
The editor of the Express is not alone in viewing disability in simplistic terms like this. Someone is either disabled or not; it’s a binary thing like some digital ‘on off switch’. But as many people, some old and some not so old, will be happy to testify, it’s not, it’s analogue. You gradually lose the ability to do the things you used to take for granted in your younger days.
There’s no cliff edge moment, leg muscles just become that bit weaker and it becomes more difficult to stand up without something to push on with your arms. Knee joints begin to show signs of wear and it becomes painful to walk Or you find you cannot read the small print, or you need the subtitles on TV programmes because you cannot hear so well as you once could.
One of the best descriptions I have heard of what life is like for older people came from the biologist Jared Diamond who at the time was 81, he said he lives a life of ‘constructive paranoia’. What he meant was that before putting your feet somewhere, check there’s nothing to fall over, when going down steps always hold the handrail, make two journeys not one when carrying things from one place to another and always put your keys in the same place.
Mostly the ability deficit that comes with age can compensated by these little tweaks to everyday life, but some cannot. In the late 1970s the bioengineer Heinz Wolff initiated a project he called URINE, an acronym for Uninteresting Research Into Necessary Equipment which looked at ways of overcoming the ability deficit which comes with age. More recently the Sports Department of Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU) started a project to examine the link between loss of muscle strength and propensity for falls in older people. But in spite of all the talk about diversity there is little evidence that there has been any widespread recognition of the impact of the incremental decline in abilities which many people experience as they age.
Not all supermarkets ensure there are plenty of smaller trolleys for people who struggle to handle the ‘family shop’ size. Some directors of TV films and dramas have them filmed in what looks like ‘Mudochrome’. Businesses and local councils arrange for Public Notices to be printed with the smallest possible font size to save money. For several years the ‘i’ newspaper regularly ran a page which had parts of the text printed in pale blue or pale yellow on a white background. Web pages frequently have text on a patterned background. These things may look great, but they are purgatory for anyone whose visual acuity isn’t 100%.
No doubt all these organisations have some well paid individual to draw up a policy document on disability and diversity, but until these individuals begin to stop thinking about disability in digital, on off, terms and begin to realise that for most people it’s not, it’s analogue, life will be just that bit more difficult than it need be for some people because it’s the slow decline in their ability to do everyday things like what McCartney was trying to do that matters.
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Saturday, 8 April 2017

Balfour Beatty lined-up for Trump’s Mexican Wall

THE BLOOMBERG NEWS outlet has reported that 'Hundreds of companies have been eyeing work on President Donald Trump’s 30-foot [high] border wall with Mexico.'
Last month,  in the Daily Express claimed:
'BALFOUR Beatty is set to face tough questions over whether it plans to try and win work constructing President Donald Trump’s controversial wall along the US-Mexico border.'
The construction giant behind the London 2012 Olympic stadium has suffered a difficult few years, but has found significant growth in the US, which is now its biggest market.
If Balfour’s chief executive Leo Quinn does decide to try and win contracts for the wall, he could face stiff competition, especially since the President has stated he wants to favour US companies as part of his 'America First' policy.
About half of the business of Balfour Beatty is already in the USA.
Although Congress hasn’t yet worked out how to pay for it yet, but more than 375 companies have told the Trump administration they’re interested in working on the controversial border-wall project.
The Mexican cement giant Cemex SAB won’t participate, though it is well positioned to profit with plants on both sides of the border.
Neither will Vinci SA, a big French engineering company, after Chief Executive Officer Xavier Huillard cited the 'sensitivities' of employees.  Emmanuel Macron, the frontrunner for the French presidency, has warned LafargeHolcum Ltd. the world’s largest cement maker, to steer clear.  Union leaders at that company have branded the wall undemocratic.

Friday, 3 March 2017

Ricky Tomlinson outs Richard Whiteley as MI5 Spy

RICKY Tomlinson, the actor star of The Royle Family reckons Richard Whiteley, the late TV Countdown presenter was working for the security services. 
Ricky made the claim about Whiteley during an interview marking the opening of a Wetherspoons pub in Chester.
Mr. Tomlinson, was a plasterer before taking up a career in comedy, and he helped to organise the controversial national building workers’ strike in during the 70’s at the same pub.
In 1973, he was sentenced to two years in prison after having been found guilty of 'conspiracy to intimidate' as one of the so-called Shrewsbury Two with Des Warren
The actor and other campaigners have long believed that he was the victim of an establishment set-up.
The Labour MP and a former Defence Minister Peter Kilfoyle is now calling on the Government to own up over the affair, which has remained shrouded in secrecy for 35 years.
Mr Kilfoyle spoke out after the Cabinet Office refused to release its secret files on the case, which include a report to the then Prime Minister Edward Heath, because of the need to 'protect the security services'.
Today the Daily Express reports:  'Files released earlier this year show the then head of MI5, Sir Michael Hanley, intervened personally to block Ricky’s release, claiming that he was involved in a communist plot to destabilise Britain.'
Ricky and his friend Dezzie Warren were dubbed the 'Shrewsbury Two' after being jailed for organising a picket in the town in 1972. The pair, who both spent much of their sentences in solitary confinement, staged a 22-day hunger strike in a bid to be declared political prisoners. Mr Kilfoyle said he would now launch an appeal to get the information released.

Friday, 13 November 2015

MP could face reprimand from parliamentary authorities over use of Commons headed notepaper!

Imelda Marcos and her shoe collection

According to a report that appeared in the Daily Express on Tuesday, Angela Rayner, the Member of Parliament for Ashton-under-Lyne, could be facing a reprimand for the use of commons headed notepaper to make a complaint to a shoe shop. The article claims, that like Imelda Marcos, wife of Philippine dictator President Ferdinand Marcos, Ms. Rayner, is an avid collector of shoes. We are publishing below the article that appeared in the William Hickey column:

"LABOUR MP Angela Rayner faces a reprimand from parliamentary authorities after using House of Commons headed notepaper to complain to a shoe shop that failed to reserve her a £195 pair of shoes with novelty four-inch Star War heels. She claims she ordered them in advance but when she called at the shop found they had sold out.

The MP for the Lancashire constituency of Ashton-under-Lyne, 35, wanted the shoes, which  boasts heels in the shape of Star Wars robot R2-D2, for an extensive collection which has earned her the nickname "Shoebacca".


Rayner a supporter of Jeremy Corbyn and recently promoted by him despite only being elected in May, should use commons notepaper only for official business.

A spokesman for the MP said: "There appears to have been a breakdown in communication between Angela and the shop, which is regrettable." What she means is she didn't expect to have to explain her actions in public.