Showing posts with label Trevor Hoyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trevor Hoyle. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 February 2021

This Cotton-Built Town by Trevor Hoyle

[after Betjeman. A long way after]
It once were great, this cotton-built town
A grand night out for half-a-crown,
Go out now you get knocked down
Or summat worse
We had cobbles and ginnels and gaslit streets,
A clip round th’ear from bobbies on beats.
No muggers or druggies, no benefits cheats,
Our nation’s curse.
Gradely folk they were back then
Slogged all week at mill for six-pound-ten:
Lancashire’s best – la crème de la crème,
Gone and forgot.
Walk down Drake Street now and weep
For Ivesons, Fashion Corner, the Carlton creep,
The legacy of civic pride sold cheap.
Who gives a jot?
It’s council top brass in the main
Who’ve least to lose and most to gain.
(1st class seats on the gravy train!)
Just hear their cries:
Sack the workers but keep the bosses!
That’s the way to cut the losses!
And round our necks like albatrosses
Hang the PFIs.
And where do all our taxes go?
You must be joking – don’t you know?
On bods with clipboards on go slow,
On Manchester Road –
Where roundabouts once did the job
The planners have incensed the mob,
Who write in fury to the Ob:
“Stop this load
Of nonsense, quick, it’s puerile,
Are they trying to compete in style
With illuminations on’t Golden Mile
And make things worse?”
Come, gentle Kong, and dump on Dale
Bury it deep so it can’t inhale.
Beyond a joke, beyond the pale,
Armpit of the universe.
**********************************************

Saturday, 20 February 2021

Deja Vu? by Andrew Wastling

HOMES are as we all know far more than concrete and brickwork. Our decision makers need to get things right. Some readers may recall that for all of its issues Ashfield Valley did at least provide easy access accommodation for a generation of Rochdale's youth. Ashfield Valley it's often airbrushed out of local social housing history and despite winning a housing award in the 1967 'Summer of Love', it quickly declined and by the 1980s was a double edged sword which on one hand was a notorious haven for drug users, glue sniffers whilst on the other a vibrant safe haven for a small army of squatters , artists and writers as well as being home to a large number of families, OAP's and single people'. 'Ashy Valley' comprised just over 1,000 flats and it's eventual demolition it can be argued artificially increased rents in the private sector locally by reducing housing unit supply , along with Margaret Thatcher's who passed two pieces of major housing legislation in 1980 & 1989.
The 1980 Housing Act extended the right to buy to tenants with generous discounts following decades more than a million council homes were sold at an estimated cost in today's money of more than £60bn. The majority of sold-off homes were not replaced, leaving social housing as a residual tenure. Since 1990, a further 500,000 Council Houses have been sold off. The 2021 local housing crisis has been manufactured by generations of town planners and politicians from all political parties not arrived at by sheer chance.
Writing in the guardian in 2017, Faiza Shaheen, (Director of CLASS Centre for Labour and Social Studies) argued convincingly that thirty years of bad policy have encouraged house hoarding, avarice and the massive accumulation of wealth – to the detriment of the rest of society , pointing out that:
'The richest 1% of adults, some 488,000 people, own 14% of the nation's assets ,– worth about £11tn. At the other end of the financial scale, 15% (7.3 million people) either own no assets at all, or are in debt. And things are potentially about to get a lot worse – house prices are forecast to rise by 50% over the next eight years, according to the National Association of Estate Agents and the Association of Residential Letting Agents.'
Locally we are in danger of repeating the exact same failed solutions to the same problems on local social housing only on a much larger scale.
Despite some of the swearing mandatory viewing of the Tony Wilson narrated documentary Hard-core Valley - Ashfield Valley Flats' (1) might be advisable for those RBH / RMBC making the decisions on College Bank & Lower Falinge. Not least for the nostalgia trip some of us might have seen familiar faces admiring the spiked hair , the dreadlocks ,& colourful punk fashions & music of the time. Readers of Northern Voices will be aware that Cult 1975 novel Rule of the Night, by Rochdale author Trevor Hoyle, is largely based on the estate. (please see Greater Manchester's forgotten Punk Estate : Greater Manchester's forgotten punk estate - Manchester Evening News).
Tragically one of the well known punk squatters , Jon Rimmer, who was a familiar sight once a fortnight carrying a huge bag of spuds over his shoulder bought with his Giro from Ron Chalker 'The Potatoe Mans' warehouse on Mellor Street, walking through town barefoot accompanied by his placid natured alsatian Rebel, was his was murdered in 2019 (Rochdale News | News Headlines | Funeral fundraiser launched for Jon Rimmer - Rochdale Online) whilst the various disparate tribes making up the valley were dispersed locally to Sheffield, Hebden Bridge, Totnes and Brighton and some as far afield as to the anarchist squat in Christiania in the heart of Copenhagen. It was the end of an era for many. The start of a long journey of self-discovery for others.
In Wilson's documentary there is an unfortunate incident of camera photobombing by an unwelcome local politician ( Cyril Smith ) who was renowned for avoiding the estate & its residents like the pneumonic plague when cameras were not present and it came to doing his job as town MP. The documentary is a snap-shot in time from Rochdale's housing archive. To see this vile politician brazenly stand beside the flats and shamelessly say he's been an MP for eighteen years tells it's own story when we are mindful that his brother Norman held a Rochdale Council housing portfolio at the time.
As does some rudimentary investigation of which local establishment politicians who oversaw this social housing scandal who are still unbelievably active in local council politics well past their sell by date?
As with Ashfield Valley asbestos is reportedly present in College Bank. Lower Falinge has taken over the unenviable & undeserved mantle of a 'failed estate' from Ashy Valley - despite having wonderful community initiatives and brilliant residents who struggle to maintain a vibrant community despite being consistently failed by Rochdale Borough Housing and local politicians of all parties over the decades.
Our mainstream media frequently uses social stereotyping images of Lower Falinge when they wish to indulge their penchant for poverty safaris to illustrate numerous & serial articles on 'welfare dependency' & 'broken Britain'. Ashfield Valley was a planning & delivery disaster that could & should have been averted. It was an abject failure & scandal, a 'masterclass' in how not to run social housing. The demolition of Great Howarth by Rochdale Borough Housing and the current state of and proposals for College Bank and Lower Falinge - as well as other Rochdale Borough Housing managed properties - shows that absolutely nothing has been learned by our decision makers who seem intent on making the exact same mistakes, using failed 'solutions' to mediate what appear to be institutionally engrained repeated failures with getting to grips with social housing in Rochdale over half a century.
Proving there's nothing really new under the sun .We can see that Rochdale already has considerable form when it comes to home regeneration, redevelopment, failure & eventual demolition due to years of mismanagement of housing stock by criminal & inept local politicians.
Am I alone in getting a sickening sense of Déjà vu about RBH kamikaze plans to demolish College Bank flats?
What's the betting Rochdale's local propertied class once again trouser private rents hand over fist in the aftermath of this exercise in turbo drived gentrification?
Historical Archive:
Tony Wilson's 1990's documentary : Harcore Valley from Granada and Simon Armitages ' Xanadu from 1992 both give powerful insights into a community about to be demolished and can be seen on YouTube.
In Hardcore Valley : Tony Wilson focuses on the marginalsied voices from the Estate both old and new in Granada TV documentary made during the demolition of the infamous Ashfield Valley estate, Rochdale. early 1990s The piece now stands as a fascinating piece of social history into an era in the history of Social Housing which has been airbrushed almost completely from history by local Town Planners intent on seeing history repeats itself
In Xanadu : Simon Armitage focuses on housing problems on the notorious Ashfield Valley Estate in Rochdale, Lancashire. To the background sound of the estate being demolished, Armitage discovers that life is continuing there in gentle and surprising ways. The only remaining caretaker is a survivor of the 1956 uprising in Budapest, while a neighbour rescues local stranded cats. One couple are not looking forward to moving from their immaculate flat, and another resident is cultivating a forest in his home.
***********************************************************

Sunday, 29 September 2019

ROCHDALE: THE LAST RITES*

 Is this the end for Rochdale Market?
by Trevor Hoyle
MY ten pen’orth, Brian, for what it’s worth, is that we’re decades too late to do anything about reviving Rochdale’s market. I have fond memories from the 50s of both outdoor and indoor markets — the latter especially where I used to buy ninepenny SF paperbacks from the book stall. A very warm and welcoming place, especially on a winter’s day.  Somebody told me that Todmorden’s market is very much how ours used to be, and that it’s a pleasure to visit. We tore it down and ripped out the heart of the town.

For some reason Bury has kept its market going over the years and even has coach parties coming from places like Stoke and  towns in Yorkshire to spend a day there. Any hopes that Rochdale can emulate that is pure fairyland.  When the council boasted that the Metro would bring in floods of eager visitors, my immediate thought was that the Metro would make it easier for Rochdale folk to escape to Manchester and Oldham. 

A few wind- and rainswept stalls on the Butts was never going to succeed, any fool could see that. A town centre that can’t sustain a McDonalds is on a hiding to nothing.  When I say I don’t know what the answer is, I’m really saying there is no answer.  We’re building, for god’s sake, another shopping centre when we have two that are half-empty to begin with — so then we’ll have THREE half-empty shopping centres (more like threequarters empty) which the rate-payers will be paying for for the next forty years. It’s madness. 

Over ten years ago (when I was involved with saving Touchstones from being massively underfunded by Link4Life) I put forward a strategy for the town based on its heritage of the Co-op, cotton and Gracie Fields. The idea was to turn our magnificent town hall into a cultural heritage centre with exhibits telling the story of cotton and the industrial revolution. Included would be a Gracie Fields Experience showing off all  the artefacts held in the museum archives of Gracie’s stage costumes, films, original recordings and her life story (like the one already in Touchstones but on a much grander scale). Also there would be a smaller John Bright display showing the furniture and books we have in the archive.

Alongside this you’d have the Pioneers store on Toad Lane — but greatly enlarged to include several shops and stalls done up as they were in the 1800s with shopkeepers dressed in costume.  The idea would be to focus on the cultural and historical romance of Rochdale’s past and let the commercial side take care of itself. If people started coming to experience it — via advertising and word-of-mouth — this would quickly feed through to shops and cafes opening up to cater for the visitors. The point here is not to build the shopping centre first — there are shopping centres everywhere — but to launch a genuine attraction that people want to visit and then tell their friends about.

Someone asked me if enough people would be interested in such a venture. I pointed out that the ‘grey’ pound of pensioners and retired folk amounts to billions in this country, and just such a historical heritage of cotton mills and Gracie Fields would appeal to that generation.  But it would have to be on a grand scale, worth the visit, designed and staged by a professional company, and not just a few tatty exhibits inside dusty glass cases. 

Anyway, it’s probably too late now to try this idea, we should have done it 10 or 15 years ago when I first suggested it.        

The last rites, in Roman Catholicism, are the last prayers and ministrations given to an individual of the faith, when possible, shortly before death. The last rites go by various names. They may be administered to those awaiting execution, mortally injured, or terminally ill.

****************


Monday, 3 September 2018

The Road to George Orwell

by Trevor Hoyle

TWO very desirable ambitions on my eternal wish-list came together last year (2016) — with a positive outcome for both!

First up, hiring a motor home and setting off on the road to adventure (though none too daunting or strenuous for a beginner — confining the trip to the British Isles).  The second was a dream I’ve nursed for over forty years: to visit the place where George Orwell, a literary hero of mine, wrote his final novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four.  Even if you haven’t read the book you’ll be familiar with the epithets and concepts it introduced to the world, such as ‘Big Brother’, ‘Room 101’ and ‘Newspeak’.  Indeed, the term ‘Orwellian’ has entered the language to describe a nightmare vision of a totalitarian future.

Although an established writer, with such books as Down and Out in Paris and London and The Road to Wigan Pier to his name, it was in 1945 that Orwell finally had his first commercial success with Animal FarmFor the one and only time in his impoverished career he’d made a bit of money, which meant he could take a break from the treadmill of journalism and devote himself to the novel he was desperate to write: working title The Last Man in Europe.  For this he needed peace, quiet and solitude, and a friend suggested Barnhill, an isolated dwelling on the remote island of Jura in the Hebrides, off the west coast of Scotland. In those days getting there was a 24-hour marathon slog from London via train and steamer; but for Orwell, who described Barnhill as “un-gettable-at” (no phone, no electricity, with oil lamps and log fires) it was the perfect hideaway.

There was also a sense of urgency to the quest. Orwell was suffering from TB.  He was living on precious borrowed time if he hoped to complete his novel.

Before leaving home on my personal quest I drew up a timetable and pre-booked the ferry; also four nights at the Port Mor campsite on the island of Islay. (The locals pronounce it Isle-a, I discovered.) The remaining days of the trip I left open, reckoning that since this was October, and off-season, there’d be vacancies at other campsites.

Driving the two-berth Devon Aztec motor home was easier than I thought, as long as I kept in mind its length and allowed for extra clearance when turning.  The elevated position and panoramic windscreen provided great views.  The van itself was fitted with everything we could need, including cooker and oven, microwave, fridge, toilet and shower, and TV with a DVD slot.  Twin couches converted into a large double bed, and the electric fan heater was highly efficient (which we very grateful for when Force 8 gales were blowing straight off the Atlantic all the way from Newfoundland!).

We stayed two nights on a campsite just outside Inveraray on the banks of Loch Fyne, then drove south alongside the loch down the long spit of land known as the Kintyre. We didn’t go as far as the Mull of Kintyre (made famous by the Paul McCartney song) but headed for the port of Kennacraig where we caught the boat to Islay.

On the two-hour ferry-ride, something remarkable happened.  Standing on deck, watching the misty outline of the islands growing sharper, my wife and I got into conversation with a woman taking photographs, in her fifties at a guess, who turned out to be an American travel writer.  Sarah and her companion, a retired airline hostess, had been coming to the British Isles on walking tours for the past twenty-two years; obviously serious, hardened walkers, not amateur ramblers like us!  This year, Sarah informed us, they’d rented a place on the island of Jura,  The house was called Barnhill.

Coincidences are always weird. But to have a chance encounter with someone actually staying in the pilgrimage shrine we had come all this way to see — the entire purpose of our trip — was strange indeed.  After explaining our interest and introducing ourselves, Sarah invited us to stop by the house.  (As a writer herself she knew all about the Orwell connection of course.)  Though if the weather was anywhere near decent, she reminded us, they would most likely be out during daylight hours, trekking over the hills and exploring the rugged coastline.

Our first three days we spent at Port Mor, the pre-booked campsite overlooking Loch Indaal.  Each morning we woke early, at 7am, hoping the wind and driving rain might ease off so we could set out on our trip to Jura, but the weather was foul.  Then, with only two days remaining, the skies cleared and gave us our golden chance --

Off we went, catching the ferry which takes less than ten minutes to cross the narrow straits from Port Askaig.  The only road on the island then leads all the way to the north of Jura whose fewer than two hundred human residents are vastly outnumbered by its six thousand deer. Jura is in fact a hunter’s paradise — also teeming with pheasant and grouse, which seem hell-bent on a kamikaze mission as they run alongside us, perilously close to the wheels.

After about twenty-five miles the road peters out to little more than a rutted track, passable only by Land Rover or SUV.  A sign warns you: No Motor Vehicles Beyond This Pont.  Now’s the time to don the fleeces and weather-proofs and pull on the walking boots for the final five-mile trek.  Apart from a short sharp shower or two, the day is perfect and the views truly spectacular.

Jura has a gaunt, sweeping beauty of russet-browns and purples: bracken and gorse covering mile upon mile of gentle contours, with glimpses in-between the slopes of white-flecked ocean whipped by the Atlantic westerlies.  It’s a vista that’s savage and scary in its remoteness and bleakness, yet also uplifting, indeed inspiring.

An hour into our expedition we pass a Land Rover by the side of the track; the vehicle must belong to Sarah and her companion, and I scribble a note and leave it under the windscreen wiper.  Secretly I’m hoping the two intrepid American hikers will see the message and return to Barnhill in time to make us a cup of tea and show us round the house, which I’ve read somewhere has changed hardly at all since Orwell lived there in the forties …

Alas, my wish was not to be granted.

No matter. Our ambitions and exertions are finally rewarded when below us in a cleft of hills, facing the sea, we spy the long solid structure of Barnhill itself.  White-painted walls gleaming in the sunlight and roof of grey slate. Having met, however briefly, the couple renting it, I tell myself that having a snoop around and taking photos isn’t too great an intrusion.  In my mind’s eye I picture Orwell living on the property, his tall, painfully stick-like figure working in the vegetable patch (it was just after the war when food was scarce) and preparing meals in the farmhouse kitchen.  I even know which bedroom he worked in -- upper left as you face the house.  Propped up on pillows, portable typewriter on his knees, here he battled against time and ill-health to complete his masterpiece while smoking unfiltered roll-ups, which can’t have helped the TB much.

Our visit was soon over, less than thirty minutes, but it was sufficient.  I’d made the pilgrimage, walked the same track my literary hero had trod, peeked inside the house where one of the most famous and influential books of the twentieth century had first seen light of day. Mission accomplished.

There was one final, almost mystical moment to round off our trip. Sailing back to the mainland, watching Jura grow dim and distant in the soft evening light, it reminded me of the island Bali-Ha’i in the musical South PacificThe magical island, you’ll recall, where dreams sometimes do come true.

 (This article first appeared in the Rochdale Style mag)


© Trevor Hoyle

Trevor Hoyle’s most recent novel is the environmental thriller, The Last Gasp, published by Quercus.

Monday, 20 August 2018

Orwell's letters and papers


Re the cache of letters recently found, I once took a cycling trip and called in at the cottage Orwell used to live in at Wallington near Baldock.  This was about 1974.  The lady then resident was a retired schoolmistress (headmistress I think) and she showed my round the tiny cottage – “The Stores” as it was called in Orwell’s time.  She had bought it from the people who bought it from Orwell, and they had told her that when they moved in there were several cardboard boxes in the back room, filled with old papers, letters, manuscripts and all sorts of stuff.  She asked what had happened to them and they said they made a bonfire of them in the back garden.  This was long before Orwell became famous through Animal Farm.  To them he was just a jobbing journalist and the boxes were no more than rubbish.  Today those boxes would have fetched millions from the University of Texas of wherever Orwell’s archive is located.
Regards ~ 
TREVOR HOYLE

Saturday, 24 March 2018

Police admit role in construction blacklist scandal

 sent by Trevor Hoyle (Rochdale)
THE Metropolitan Police has confirmed undercover Special Branch officers supplied information to the construction industry blacklist.

Blacklisted workers have fought tirelessly to expose wrongdoing photo

The admission follows a campaign by blacklisted workers to prove they were spied on by the police.

It comes in a letter sent by Deputy Assistant Commissioner, Richard Martin in response to a complaint made by the Blacklist Support Group to the Independent Police Complaints Commission.

The letter states: “Allegation: Police, including Special Branches, supplied information that appeared on the Blacklist, funded by the country’s major construction firms, The Consulting Association and/or other agencies, in breach of the Data Protection Act 1998. 

“The Report concludes that, on the balance of probabilities, the allegation that the police or Special Branches supplied information is ‘Proven’. 

The letter goes on to explain: “Sections of the policing community throughout the UK had both overt and covert contact with external organization, including the Economic League” 

It also conformed an “improper flow of information from Special Branch to external organisations, which ultimately appeared on the Blacklist”.

The blacklist scandal has seen more than £75m in compensation paid to workers by major contractors.

Allegations of police collusion in blacklisting were first made back in 2012 but the claims were strenuously denied by the authorities.

MP John McDonnell said: “It is now abundantly clear that various arms of the state including the Police colluded in the blacklisting process.

“This is one of the hidden scandals of the abuse of civil liberties in our country that needs to be recognised fully and addressed. The people involved need to be brought to book.” 


Dave Smith, secretary of the Blacklist Support Group said: “When we first talked about police collusion in blacklisting, people thought we were conspiracy theorists.

“We were told, ‘things like that don’t happen here’. With this admission from the Met Police, our quest for the truth has been vindicated.”

“The police are supposed to detect crime, instead they infiltrated trade unions and provided intelligence to an unlawful corporate conspiracy.”

Unite assistant general secretary Gail Cartmail, said: “This is a major breakthrough the police have finally been forced to admit what we already knew that they were knowingly and actively involved in the blacklisting of construction workers.”

http://www.constructionenquirer.com/2018/03/23/police-admit-role-in-construction-blacklist-scandal/

Dave Smith, the excellent representative for his union members, was interviewed (fairly) by Sarah Montague on Radio 4 this morning. I will put the link up later. 


******

Monday, 12 June 2017

Tory Spending on Black Propaganda

sent to NV by Trevor Hoyle
THE Conservatives spent more than £1m on negative Facebook campaign adverts attacking Jeremy Corbyn, reports suggest.
A series of videos and graphics showing the Labour leader’s past comments on debt, anti-terror laws and the IRA were promoted by the official Tory account.
READ MORE --

Sometimes Our Nightmares Don’t Come True the Tories Lose Their Majority

sent to NV by Trevor Hoyle
WHEN Theresa May called a snap election a few weeks ago, she enjoyed a 20-point lead in the opinion polls. Translated into votes, this lead would create a huge Tory margin of victory of around 100 seats in parliament.  The Tory working majority after winning the 2015 election was 12 seats.
At the same time, Labour’s prospects looked dire.  The unceasing sprays of venom directed at him by the billionaire tax-dodgers who own the right-wing media, and by the supposedly neutral BBC and the supposedly “liberal” Guardian, were compounded by the Blairite backstabbers in his own party, who made desperate attempts to unseat him as party leader.  Corbyn has long said that Blair should stand trial at The Hague for war crimes, so it is just as well that Labour did not beat the Tories, even if it prevented them from having an absolute majority.

Read more at link ---
https://www.counterpunch.org/2017/06/12/sometimes-our-nightmares-dont-come-true/

Tuesday, 23 May 2017

Noam Chomsky on the Labour Party

by Brian Bamford
LAST Sunday, Trevor Hoyle wrote a comment on the 'McCluskey states the obvious' post on this N.V. Blog in which he claimed:
'Not clear what your position is Brian. "McCluskey states the obvious" -- well it is obvious because it's true that the vast majority of the mainstream corporate media are, and always have been, against Corbyn. ANY leader, no matter who, with such a sustained campaign of vitriol waged against him, including the so-called left-of-centre Guardian, would have struggled to overcome such a negative media image. '
Earlier this month dealing with the relative unpopularity of the British Labour Party, Noam Chomsky admitted to an interviewer:
'... that the current polling position suggested Labour was not yet gaining popular support for the policy positions that he supported.' 
Only last Saturday, Joshua Chaffin, in the Financial Times said that the polls 'suggest Mrs May is cruising toward a big victory on June 8.'
But by yesterday, with news that the 'dementia tax' was hitting the conserative party hard on the doorstep, Mrs May rewrote a major item in her election manifesto - social care reform - after four days of pressure; leaving her open to the accusations of show bad political judgement and being weak when the heat is on.
Meanwhile, over the weekend the polls showed that Labour under Corbyn, was closing the gap on the Tories.  Yet, still the Corbyn approach lacks charisma.
Professor Chomsky described to The Guardian what he thought was wrong:
' "If I were a voter in Britain, I would vote for him,” said Chomsky, who admitted that the current polling position suggested Labour was not yet gaining popular support for the policy positions that he supported.'
Pro. Chomsky then added:
'There are various reasons for that – partly an extremely hostile media, partly his own personal style which I happen to like but perhaps that doesn’t fit with the current mood of the electorate,'  he said. 'He’s quiet, reserved, serious, he’s not a performer.  The parliamentary Labour party has been strongly opposed to him.  It has been an uphill battle.'
Trevor Hoyle in his comment complains:
'I don't think Corbyn or McDonnell are dull at all.  They state their case and explain their policies in adult, measured tones.  To expect them to go all showbiz and join the media frenzy is to support exactly what is wrong with the political climate in this country.'
It might well be that a serious tone is preferable to those who read The Guardian like Trevor Hoyle, or The New York Times like me, but most of the people in the towns and cities in the North of England where the working-class target voters reside don't read these papers, and these people judging from what we are hearing prefer what Cyril Smith used to call Razzamataz than the kind of sombre socialism we might fancy.
When asked what motivation he thought newspapers had to oppose Corbyn, Chomsky said the Labour leader had, like Bernie Sanders in the US, broken out of the 'elite, liberal consensus' that he claimed was 'pretty conservative'.
Chomsky told Anushka Asthana, The Guardian Political Editor on Wednesday on 10 May 2017, that 'Labour needed to "reconstruct itself" in the interests of working people, with concerns about human and civil rights at its core, arguing that such a programme could appeal to the majority of people.'
Chomsky talks of the need for socio-economic programmes and the way the key defence against the existential threats of climate change and the nuclear age were being radically weakened, and then goes on to describe what he wants is the defence as a 'functioning democratic society with engaged, informed citizens deliberating and reaching measures to deal with and overcome the threats'.
This is all well and good, but the circles I move in among my neighbours  and other working people, I don't find much genuine concern about the kind of things that might concern Chomsky, Trevor Hoyle and me, like 'human rights'; 'civil rights'; or even the environment generally.
The great academic, Noam Chomsky who often describes himself as 'a kind of anarchist', and who is in Britain to deliver a lecture at the University of Reading on what he believes is the deteriorating state of western democracy, claimed that voters had turned to the Conservatives in recent years because of  'an absence of anything else'.
What the good professor ought to understand is that the left in this country since the Chartists, has rarely had a program or a strategy for social change which in any way will convince or inspire ordinary people, instead it continues to react to an aganda set by the establishment and the State.  Marching, protesting and demonstrating against cuts; Trade Union Acts; privatisation and the erosion of the NHS is all that the left reacts to.  There is very little vison on the British left, and that is why the right in this country these days always tends to have the initiative.

Monday, 14 November 2016

Jonathan Cook's view of US elections

sent to Northern Voices from Trevor Hoyle:
Jonathan Cook's perspective on the US elections:
American liberals unleashed the Trump monster
By Jonathan Cook, published on Jonathan Cook, Nov 9, 2016

The Earth has been shifting under our feet for a while, but all that
liberals want to do is desperately cling to the status quo like a life-raft.
Middle-class Britons are still hyper-ventiliating about Brexit, and now
middle-class America is trembling at the prospect of Donald Trump in the
White House.

And, of course, middle-class Americans are blaming everyone but themselves.
Typifying this blinkered self-righteousness was a column yesterday, written
before news of Trump's success, from Guardian journalist Jonathan Freedland,
Britain's unofficial stenographer to power and Washington fanboy. He blamed
everyone but Hillary Clinton for her difficult path to what he then assumed
was the White House.

Read more ...

> https://www.newcoldwar.org/american-liberals-unleashed-trump-monster/


Hillary voters: stop calling everyone a Nazi and start reading Wikileaks
My Facebook news feed is somehow still full of people trying to blame Trump's
election on a nationwide collusion of Klan members and male supremacists and
on the progressives who refused to fall in line and support Hillary Clinton.
This insane adamant refusal to confront the reality of what's happening in
this country will kill the Democratic party if it doesn't change
drastically.

If you still believe that Donald Trump was elected because of racism, it is
because you have remained willfully ignorant of what has been happening in
your country. If you still believe that Trump's election is indicative of a
neo-fascist uprising in America, it is because you have not ventured outside
of your self-reinforcing validation loop of fellow Clinton voters and your
corporate media echo chamber. If you still, days later, think that Hillary
Clinton's loss is the fault of anyone other than Hillary Clinton, it's
because you haven't been reading WikiLeaks.

  Letter: It's ignorant to vote for Hillary Clinton without reading
WikiLeaks https://t.co/PpJjt8Mf4m pic.twitter.com/r3pEaklcSy

  - Denver Post Opinion (@denveropinion) November 2, 2016

Read more ....:

http://www.inquisitr.com/3704461/hillary-voters-owe-it-to-america-to-stop-calling-everyone-a-nazi-and-start-reading-wikileaks/=

Tuesday, 20 September 2016

Jack Straw's Cynical E-mail

'You see, Straw couldn't really give a toss about revealing the truth as exposed by the Chilcot Inquiry, all that concerns him is that the Brezit result dominated the headlines and took the heat off him and Blair.  That sums up Straw's moral and ethical beliefs -- or rather the lack of them -- in a nutshell.'                                                                         
From Trevor Hoyle
 
 
 

Thursday, 8 September 2016

Rochdale Novelist Responds to Historian

Brian ~ the writer (Felipe Fernández-Armesto) argues that sexual misdeeeds are piffling in comparison with bribery and corruption and other matters of financial skullduggery and that Danczuk's sins are fairly minor. But the writer seems unaware that Danczuk has also been involved (and it's ongoing as we speak) in dubious financial practices too, in that he claimed nearly ten grand in expenses from the Commons to host accommodation in London for two of his children ~ who never stayed with him. So our Simon seems to operate on all fronts with equal aplomb.
 
Trevor (Hoyle): Rochdale novelist and author

Thursday, 11 August 2016

GMB Backs Owen Smith For Labour Leader


From Trevor Hoyle
OWEN Smith made much of his backing by the GMB union. He was delighted to have won 60 per cent of the vote, as against 40 per cent for Corbyn.  Sounds impressive until you look at the actual figures.
The GMB has over 600,000 members. Turnout in this election was 8.1 per cent.  Yes ~ 8.1 per cent.
The actual figures:
TH, Owen – 25,969 (60%)
CORBYN, Jeremy - 17,450 (40%)
GMB Backs Owen Smith For Labour Leader
Wednesday, August 10, 2016
Britain's third largest Labour Party affiliate announces support for leadership candidate following membership ballot.
GMB, the UK’s third largest trade union, today endorsed Owen Smith in the Labour Party leadership contest.
The union, which represents members across the public and private sectors, balloted members to ask their opinion on who the union should support.
By 60% to 40%, GMB members voted to endorse Smith over his rival Jeremy Corbyn in a ballot administered by independent agency Electoral Reform Services (ERS)*.
Tim Roache, GMB General Secretary said:
“The Labour Party is at a crossroads. I’m under no illusions that we’re living through dangerous political times – the like of which I haven’t seen during my three decades in our movement. It's time for us to face up to reality.
"GMB balloted our members because this kind of decision shouldn’t be taken from up on high. We’re a democratic organisation here to serve our members’ interests. I was determined that our members would have their say. And they've had it.
"I’ll proudly campaign alongside Owen in the coming weeks and months to deliver on his pledges to end the public sector pay freeze, to support defence workers, to invest in health and industry, and to build an industrial strategy – these are bread and butter issues for the people I represent.
"But we can only tackle them if we’re in government. That’s the end game and I hope whatever the final result, the Labour Party will unite when all this is over. GMB members cannot afford for Labour to be talking to itself in a bubble for the next five years while the Tories run riot through our rights at work, our public services and our communities.”
End
Contact: GMB press office on 07958 156846 / 07813 541658 or press.office@gmb.org.uk

Saturday, 23 July 2016

Is the Labour Party in its Death Throws?

Sent to Northern Voices by Trevor Hoyle:

The Stench of Death hangs over The Guardian – not Labour.

Submitted by on July 20, 2016 – 11:53 am2 Comments
The Haze was amused to read a recent slew of articles in The Guardian,  insisting that the Labour Party has been afflicted by some terrible disease and is close to death. Voters are getting involved in politics it seems and this has got The Guardian terribly upset.
In this vitriolic piece Nick Cohen smears colleague Seamus Milne as being part of a Corbyn “insurgency” and Paul Mason for “taking braggart swagger and cocksure certainties of newspaper punditry into politics”. The article drips with anger and bile – but after reading it (and many others) it strikes us that it is not The Labour Party that is in danger of expiring – but The Guardian.
Rewind to December of last year and  we see The Guardian Media Group losing money – losses so serious that GMG proposed axing 250 jobs (13% of its workforce) including 100 posts in editorial.  Look at this chart of losses since 2008.
 
For more go to http://www.sodiumhaze.org/2016/07/20/the-stench-of-death-hangs-over-the-guardian-not-labour/

Thursday, 30 June 2016

'We Are The Many' at Hebden Bridge

Sent in from Trevor Hoyle
Hebden Bridge Picture House -- Sunday 17 July
'WE ARE MANY'
AHEAD of the upcoming publication of the Chilcot Inquiry, it feels timely to revisit Amir Amirani's incendiary documentary We Are Many. It's the story of 15 February 2003, when over 30 million people in over 800 cities across the world marched in demonstration against the Iraq War. How did this day come about?  Who organised it?  And was it, as many people claimed, a total failure?

Monday, 14 September 2015

Alan Milburn: Labour man


sent in by Trevor Hoyle

Posted by John S on September 12, 2015, 12:03 am, in reply to "Will The Real Cooper Please Stand Up?"
'he operated a small radical bookshop in the Westgate Road, called Days of Hope...was Co-ordinator of the Trade Union Studies Information Unit (TUSIU) from the mid-1980s onwards..co-ordinated a campaign to defend shipbuilding in Sunderland...In 2002 Milburn introduced NHS foundation trusts, "described at the time as a sort of halfway house between the public and private sectors... "

'In 2013 Milburn joined PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) as Chair of PwC's UK Health Industry Oversight Board, whose objective is to drive change in the health sector, and assist PwC in growing its presence in the health market.[20][21] Milburn continued to be Chairman of the European Advisory Board at Bridgepoint Capital, whose activities include financing private health care companies providing services ito the NHS,[22][23] and continued as a member of the Healthcare Advisory Panel at Lloyds Pharmacy.[24][25]' 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Milburn

A soldier of fortune. Did the usual NUS / 'radical bookshop' / trade union / Labour Party gravy train and then by virtue of being around in the New Labour landslide and his face fitting he hit the jackpot.
He's worse than the Tories and the financial elite.  Farted around with the left until he saw being in the right place at the right time would make him rich. 
Any private Healthcare gig he can bleed the taxpayer indirectly for via PCW and the rest. Solidarity with the Sunderland shipbuilders, eh, comrade! 

Thursday, 7 March 2013

Rochdale Cabinet & claims of dodgy credit


LAST night in Rochdale Town Hall, Trevor Hoyle, a supporter of the protest group Touchstones Challenge, asked 'What were the Board of Trustees (Governors) doing ... were they fulfilling their roles as a charity?' He was speaking of the business oversight of the charity Link4Life, in an exchange of views and questions with the public shortly before an emergency Cabinet meeting of Rochdale Council set to discuss the developments following the revelations that the bosses of Link4Life, Craig McAteer, the managing director and his deputy, Peter Kilkenny, had used the company credit card for 'personal' items.

The Rochdale Council leader, Colin Lambert, had pointed out that Link4Life is an independent body separate from the Council and with its own Board of Governors; though there are Councillors on the Board of Governors they don't represent the Council. Link4Life provides Leisure, Sport centres and museum services in the Rochdale area on behalf of the council. The Chief Executive told the meeting that with regard to the nature of the contract between Link4Life and the Council, there had been no 'systemic service delivery' failure but that 'conduct is an issue'.

Mr. Hoyle argued that though 'Link4Life is separate from Rochdale MBC, the council-tax payers are largely financing Link4Life!' Councillor Lambert assured him that 'the Council is trying to get the best deal for the tax-payer' and that the Council have sought an independent investigation. It seems the Council will be requesting that it be able to review the audited accounts of Link4Life; that it will be revisiting the partnership agreement with Link4Life and that it will be trying to get an agreement by this coming weekend.

Wednesday, 11 July 2012

Local Novelist Queries Link4Life Bosses' Pay

Letter to Rochdale Observer from Trevor Hoyle:

PRIOR to the opening of the £11 million leisure centre, the council's finance chief, Farooq Ahmed, tells us that the high salaries for Link4Life executives are deserved if the organisations they manage are performing (Rochdale Observer June 30).

But if the 70% increase over 4 years for managing director Craig McAteer is 'deserved', where does this leave the rest of the Link4Life staff whose salaries have been frozen, had their hours and wages reduced, or worse still, been made redundant?  One rule for the executives, it seems, who are 'deserving', another for the foot soldiers who actually run these organisations.  No pay rises for them (if they are lucky enough to still have jobs).

And I still can't get my head round the fact that while Link4Life is supposedly a charitable, non-profit making trust, funded largely by Rochdale rate-payers, why the board of Trustees and councillors alike see nothing wrong in permitting these inflated salaries.  Where is their sense of responsibility?  Have they been asleep?  Is it they just don't care, or are they powerless?  I'd really like to know, if someone can be bothered to tell me.

Yes of course I welcome the new leisure centre.  I'd also welcome a fraction of the £34 million Link4Life is spending on sport and leisure capital projects going towards new arts and heritage facilities.  There was a brilliant suggestion recently in the (Rochdale) Observer from Mrs. Enid Jones (Letters June 23) that instead of knocking down, the old Art Deco swimming baths could be used as rehearsal rooms for local groups and a theatre/ performance space.

As well as being near the centre of town, with parking, and providing a resource we badly need, it would preserve an iconic building which holds fond memories for three generations of Rochdalians.

What about it, Link4Life management, board of Trustees and councillors?  Any takers?

Trevor Hoyle,
Newhey.