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    <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Gwyneth's personal blog</title>
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    <modified>2013-06-16T14:57:33Z</modified>
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/266-GITMO-detention-permanent.html" rel="alternate" title="GITMO detention permanent" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-06-16T14:39:43Z</issued>
        <created>2013-06-16T14:39:43Z</created>
        <modified>2013-06-16T14:57:33Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=266</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/266-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">GITMO detention permanent</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
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                <!-- s9ymdb:215 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="280" height="125" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/guernica.jpg" alt="" /> Sunday 16th June, blue skies after morning drizzle. Just back from the <a href="http://www.freeuniversitybrighton.org/events/re-making-picassos-guernica-2013-06-16/">Sewing Guernica Project</a> for half an hour in the Jubilee Library, a kind of ritual act of art as protest, as i understand it, the banner gets created in public, by women and men who haven't, most of them, done much sewing before (plus a core team of experts), and this will be going on all summer, in various venues. Me, I can sew, not so great at small talk, which is a handicap... The swifts haven't been around for a few days. I hope they come back.<br />
<br />
<br />
So, <a href="http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/06/14-2">http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/06/14-2</a> the House of Representatives has voted to keep GITMO open and for the detention of prisoners never charged, and cleared of any wrong-doing, to continue forever. <br />
<br />
Hard to get your head around the world we live in, is it not? Cannibal pie.<br />
<br />
Sewing Guernica is at the Jubilee library next Sunday too, and at the Friends' Meeting House in Middle Street the week after, if you feel like dropping in. Materials provided! Mind you sign your needle in and out. Dangerous things, sewing needles...<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.commondreams.org/">Common Dreams</a> urgently needs more donations, btw, and it provides a vital service. If you feel you could give them some money (whether or not you're in the US), please do.<br />
<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/265-The-Landscape-Of-Fear.html" rel="alternate" title="The Landscape Of Fear" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-06-14T07:20:02Z</issued>
        <created>2013-06-14T07:20:02Z</created>
        <modified>2013-06-16T14:55:00Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=265</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/265-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">The Landscape Of Fear</title>
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                <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-22873790"><!-- s9ymdb:214 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="320" height="180" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/Nomorepagethree.jpg" alt="" /></a> Friday 14th June, grey and perishing cold. <br />
<br />
Loved Caroline Lucas's teeshirt stunt in the Commons, and her quick-witted connection between this modest white teeshirt, deemed offensive, inappropriate dress, and the half-naked "glamour models" relentlessly assaulting us, from the pages of a national newspaper. . . and then I remembered an article I read in last week's New Scientist, called "Landscape of Fear". It was based on an  animal behaviour survey in Yellowstone Park, meant to see how the elk population was responding now wolves have been reintroduced. The received theory is that predators keep prey species in check by eating them. The discovery was that the process works by intimidation alone. Where the elks can smell wolves, where they can see signs of wolves, they can't thrive. Physical condition suffers, reproduction rate suffers, population goes down. Young elk don't play, stressed adults leave the meadows, and retreat into the forest, where food is harder to find. "it was like looking at two different countries" says the scientist. "One at peace and one at war." Conclusion: top predators don't have to kill, their kills are relatively infrequent and isolated events, compared to their mere presence. They just have to be around, being scary. . . <br />
<br />
This is what men do to women, I thought. They don't have to rape and kill (and if actual violence against women were <em>aberrant</em> behaviour, it would hardly have the same impact). It's the relentless, "harmless" low-level intimidation that keeps women "in their place", that's what does the trick. <br />
<br />
I remember how I felt in the Seventies, and even the Eighties. How close change seemed, how I could walk with my head up; how sure I was that the men I counted as friends in sf genre understood what equality meant, and could be trusted. But after a while, I knew had to change my mind. I knew it would be much harder than I'd thought, because <em>nobody</em>, <em>ever</em> gives up entrenched privilege and unjust powers without a long, dogged struggle. And it had to be a non-violent struggle, this dogged one step forward two steps back mission to make the world a better place, whatever form it takes, and no matter how long it might take, because <em>once the weapons are out, everybody loses</em>. And then it was September 2001, and I knew that women the world over, not only  in the overt warzones, would be living in a landscape of fear again. <br />
<br />
I am so proud of the young women of today, the ones who stand up, who speak out, even in this landscape of fear; even despite the endless intimidation.<br />
I have such respect for them. <br />
<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/264-Fields-Of-Gold.html" rel="alternate" title="Fields Of Gold" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-06-11T16:46:21Z</issued>
        <created>2013-06-11T16:46:21Z</created>
        <modified>2013-06-11T18:11:11Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=264</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/264-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Fields Of Gold</title>
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                <!-- s9ymdb:212 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="413" height="310" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/1-P1020229.JPG" alt="" /> Tuesday 11th June, cold and grey, with a light persistent drizzle. Yesterday was well omened and productive, good work on the latest project, studied my greek, saw the swifts racing about over my head at 7.30am (I'm beginning to believe our tiny colony here is secure, for a while) and spotted a stickleback! The first sighting since they were decanted into the "wildlife" pool back in mid May. (But we knew they were okay, as the mosquito larvae horde vanished). Today I have achieved absolutely nowt except lose my latest phone photos in the depths of Picasa and spend about 3 hours trying to locate them; fail to spot an Afghan Women's Rights petition that was staring me in the face, fail to buy any "organic" apples because they were all generic monsters from Argentina, and go for a swim. Oh wait, I got my my hair cut.  And bought some tomatoes.<br />
<br />
There, that's my contribution to the NSA's scrapbook for the day. I feel I may have been cheating on them, since I use Facebook to advertise for Avaaz and Compassion In World Farming and the like, whereas this blog is usually short on idle life-logging.<br />
<br />
<br />
<strong>I Kid You Not</strong><br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.rsc.org.uk/about-us/updates/titus-pie.aspx"><!-- s9ymdb:213 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="179" height="243" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/kidpie.jpg" alt="" /></a>So cultural since <em>Stimmung</em>, I don't know where to start.<em> King Lear</em> in St Nicolas Gardens (bit of a wash-out, sadly. No magic, no tragic grandeur and even the weather more dismal than spectacular), Hamlet at Stratford on Avon, Gabriel Jones and Marianne Wright at Charlton House, standing in for an absent friend (lovely, of course, especially the Debussy set). David Farr's/Jonathan Slinger's  Hamlet <a href="http://www.spectator.co.uk/arts/theatre/8879411/thrust-and-parry/">didn't please everyone</a>  and I agree with most of the criticisms in the Spectator review (although I <em>loved</em> the jumpers-touch, personally). Ophelia was a bland schoolgirl, Hamlet was Prufrock, and the rest of 'em hardly differentiated. Yet somehow it was gripping, from start to finish, &amp; when I say Slinger's look of dazzled, radiant relief, when he has finally achieved his task, will stay with me, I am not being funny. <br />
<br />
We ate in the rooftop restaurant, and how beautiful the Avon and its trees looked, under a blue-washed evening sky, <em>katoprasino</em>, as the greeks say, greener than green. But were not tempted by the playful idea of a mock-child pie. <br />
<br />
Pleased by the month's early sales figures on my Bold as Love ebooks (nb, it does not take much to please me!), may I reccommend the Bold As Love website: really not bad, considering the tools I had, and the complete absence of any training (I just made it up). Except it's a <em>little</em> alarming to note how much of what I saw and imagined ahead, but thought was either wildly exaggerated, pure fantasy or  "really" a hundred years away, is with us now. Even Devolution for Wales, my goodness. The Band of Gypsys page is the best effort, I think.  <br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/">http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/</a><br />
<br />
May I also draw your attention to the original gwynethann site, where you'll find a wealth of stories and essays, not all of them  annoyingly formatted in strange designs, and there's usually a download button. (I've been locked out of gwynethann for a while, as my ancient form of Dreamweaver can't talk to Windows 8, but I have plans)<br />
<br />
<a href="http://homepage.ntlworld.com/gwynethann/">http://homepage.ntlworld.com/gwynethann/</a><br />
<br />
<strong>Calling All. . . Clarion Alumni and Friends</strong><br />
<br />
If you are working on a writing project this summer, please consider signing up yourself for the annual Clarion write-a-thon: <br />
<br />
What is a write-a-thon, anyway? It's just like a walk-a-thon. But instead of walking, we're writing, and instead of making pledges per mile, we're making pledges per word, chapter, or story. Writers get support, encouragement and motivation, and the option of joining or creating a team of other writers. Those who care about the writers in their life get a way to show their support. And money is raised for a literally fantastic cause -- the Clarion Science Fiction &amp; Fantasy Writers' Workshop. For further details, go to <a href="http://clarionwriteathon.org/">http://clarionwriteathon.org</a><br />
<br />
<!-- s9ymdb:211 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="85" height="109" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/1-Photo0225.serendipityThumb.jpg" alt="" /> The keynote image today is the buttercup meadows at Balcombe, East Sussex, an Area Of Outstanding Natural Beauty, I never saw them so beautiful as this year, and look your last, because <a href="http://www.midsussextimes.co.uk/news/breaking-news-g4s-to-provide-security-at-cuadrilla-site-in-balcombe-1-5071970">Cuadrilla</a> is about to start tearing them apart. I kid you not. And for what? <em>Why</em> destroy this beauty, in the face of  the passionate resistance of the locals? Why  add more and worse poison to the poisonous cocktail already being forced down our throats? Even if it's successful, even if it wasn't another giant leap towards setting our feet on Cormac McCarthy's <em>Road</em>, SHALE GAS MINING WILL NOT REDUCE THE PRICE OF GAS. I think you can believe it, when the firms involved tell us so themselves. So why? Kid pie... There's no end to it, is there.  
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/262-Something-In-The-Air....html" rel="alternate" title="Something In The Air..." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-05-22T16:09:13Z</issued>
        <created>2013-05-22T16:09:13Z</created>
        <modified>2013-05-22T16:09:13Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=262</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/262-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Something In The Air...</title>
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                <!-- s9ymdb:210 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="279" height="180" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/stockhausen.jpg" alt="" /> Wednesday 22nd May, same heavy cloud as yesterday, but still and not too cold. The swifts are satisfied with this weather, they were hawking under the cloud all morning, over the valley outside my window. <br />
<br />
Today the Nature Conservation bodies of the UK published their ominously titles <a href="http://www.rspb.org.uk/Images/england_tcm9-345846.pdf">State Of Nature </a>report, and as you would expect, it's not good news. Nor will there ever be good news for the State Of Nature, until all the people who don't care by natural inclination realise they <em>need</em> to care. Starting with our government, whose antics just get loonier and loonier, as if to make amends; while the real live loons (the great divers, whose cry is like the mourning of lost souls) are set to vanish. Along with the butterflies, the hedgehogs, the toads, the swifts. The bees. Hey, BBC, what about that other news item you posted today, all about the bumper apple crop, our reward for a long cold winter. <em>Not without the bees, there won't be</em> (to quote one of the few non-facetious comments this story garnered). <br />
<br />
Anyway, that lovely lad in the keynote image today is Karlheinz Stockhausen, in commemoration of a rare performance of Stimmung that we attended on Saturday night in the Jubilee Library, courtesy of the estimable MOOT (a screaming party of swifts chasing us joyously down Roundhill Crescent, as we left the house). Six singers, one chord, and a medley of interwoven  "lyrics", notably including the highly graphic erotic poetry Karlheinz had just written on his honeymoon (the piece is dedicated to his second wife, artist Mary Bauermeister). But the word means <em>atmosphere</em>, and I'm so taken with it I think I'll change the name of one of the characters in my current work-in-progress. Ah, 1968 and all that! I will not attempt to describe Stimmung to you, but the singers (Intimate Voices) were great, the Irishfusionrock on the Great Escape stage outside shut up after the first ten minutes; I personally loved it, and the venue wonderfuly well chosen. We don't often get to see what a beautiful majestic space the library hall is, with its floating mezzanine floor above. (But couldn't help reflecting, me, that the Council must have been mad to think we'd ever pay off the never-never...)<br />
<br />
This afternoon have taken delivery of a breeding pair of <a href="http://www.arkive.org/three-spined-stickleback/gasterosteus-aculeatus-aculeatus/">3 spined sticklebacks</a>, from Carp Co of Kent. Buying sticklebacks is like buying a hamster btw: the livestock pretty much free, the packaging is the expensive bit. But better than taking them from some wild habitat, and I fell out with the idea of snow melt minnows. They have now vanished into the depths of the "wildlife pond", from whence I sincerly hope they will emerge to make forays on the mosquito larvae. I love nature, but I really refuse to live with a mosquito-ridden swamp at the bottom of the garden.<br />
<br />
Picked up <em>Alif the Unseen</em> at the Jubilee yesterday. I wonder if I'll like it, having not very positive feelings about the Arab Spring, owing to the legend of its origins besides everything else. I mean <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/apr/23/fedia-hamdi-slap-revolution-tunisia">The Slap</a>.<br />
<br />
A woman in uniform has the temerity to slap a man (actually she didn't) and this sparks off a glorious democratic Islamic revolution... Well, that's just great. That just about sums it up.<br />
<br />
Of which more later, when we've been drowned at King Lear.<br />
<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/261-Un-bel-di-vedremo.html" rel="alternate" title="Un bel di vedremo" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-05-17T14:19:18Z</issued>
        <created>2013-05-17T14:19:18Z</created>
        <modified>2013-05-17T15:57:38Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=261</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/261-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Un bel di vedremo</title>
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                <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVRhuQWS4tc"><!-- s9ymdb:91 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="144" height="165" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/swift.jpg" alt="" /> </a>Friday 17th May, &amp; the hundredth day of the hunger strike at Guantanamo. If you're interested, why not give President Obama a call on 1.202.456.1111? Tell him you fully support him in his committment to shut the place down, and what's wrong with today? If you're UK, you could tell him you're very willing to welcome Shaker Aamer back to London, so there's no problem here... <br />
<br />
Cloudy afternoon with warmth in the air. How quickly the urban gardens have put on their summer plumage, since spring finally arrived. Even the walnut tree at the bottom of the hill is covered in blossom (I mean, chunky green catkins). How the blackbirds, the warblers and the dunnocks sing. This morning, early, one, two, three, no, four, no five, swifts, hawking and shrilling up in a clear, cold blue sky. They arrived at last yesterday evening. So few, but still, here they are, one more time. Hope it's a better season for them than 2012. Flying very high, they can't be nesting around here anymore, but somewhere not far away. I've heard there's a swift conservation thing going on around Brighton General, the old hospital that clambers along the top of the hill opposite my window: must check that out. <br />
<br />
Good news! <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-22543860">The HS2 project has been found wanting by the National Audit Office</a>. Benefits unclear, huge funding gap. Yay! Spend (some of the money) elsewhere! The country will get a rail service that works, instead of this massive BIG CONCEPT friends-of-Dave money pit. Oh, wait a minute. The story's gone and vanished. There's a different one up on the BBC page now... Ah well.<br />
<br />
Here's another glimmer of sense. The Thames Estuary Airport "should be rejected", and <a href="http://www.hounslow.gov.uk/index/transport_and_streets/public_transport/heathrow.htm">Heathrow should be improved instead</a>. Excellent idea! (Relatively, in a country where any suggestion of putting the brakes on climate change just gets blank looks). I can dream.<br />
<br />
Yet more good news (er, arguably): Deep Water Horizon bites. I wonder if BP really <em>did </em>beg Dave Cameron to help them wriggle out of the awful price of what they did. Who can tell? Bad timing, given the building row over petrol price-fixing. I wonder if they really are getting seriously damaged by naughty US lawyers, who have neither morals nor limits to their greed? Sounds far-fetched to me, but one can hope. <br />
<br />
<strong>Congratulations</strong> <br />
<br />
Nicola Griffith's <a href="http://gemaecca.blogspot.co.uk/">Hild</a> is "one of the most buzzed-about forthcoming novels of the year". Wow. Sounds exciting! Congratulations to Nicola.<br />
<br />
And hurrahs for Jonathan Wright on the launch of his <a href="http://www.sfx.co.uk/2013/05/16/adventure-rocketship-launches/">Adventure Rocketship!</a> "Let's All Go To The Science Fiction Disco!" (I was supposed to contribute to this one, only it didn't work out)<br />
<br />
<strong>Watching</strong>: <br />
<br />
Arne Dahl, the Swedish police procedural with a novel twist. He likes his happy endings, doesn't he? Hannibal the Cannibal x2, but I don't think we're going back for more, not even for the sake of the riveting and adorable Mads Mikkelsen. Gabriel tells people Mikkelsen is our "man-crush": leading me to point out that being a heterosexual (mostly) female, I'm entitled to call it an unqualifed crush). I am definitely going to get round to buying The Hunt, sick of waiting for it to turn up on a mocie channel. But "Hannibal?" Nah, I don't think so. The concept is <a href="http://onlineslangdictionary.com/meaning-definition-of/rinsed">rinsed out</a>, the execution gory, grisly shallow and portentous. See, in my book, gory grisly and shallow is absolutely fine. But not that third thing.  <br />
<br />
And old movies, and the Channel Four news in case there's any more good jokes trending, like the BP thing aforementioned, or Nigel Farage calling people fascists...<br />
<br />
<strong>Reading</strong> <br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Darkside-Belinda-Bauer/dp/0552158887/ref=la_B0028OJRCS_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1368803067&sr=1-4">Belinda Baur, Darkside</a>. I liked "Blacklands" when it came out, I still like Bauer's deceptively simply, almost childish style, but this one seems a bit exploitative, and also features my very least favourite type of homicidal maniac.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/H%C3%A5kan-Nesser/e/B001IOBL78">Hakan Nesser, <em>The Return</em></a>. Solid stuff. Why is there a moody picture of a girl on every Nesser cover now? Really don't get it.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Voice-Spirits-Commandant-Michel-Investigation/dp/0857050796/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1368803690&sr=1-1&keywords=xavier-marie+bonnot"><em>The Voice Of The Spirits</em> Xavier-Marie Bonnot.</a> I like this one. Quirky, intriguing and enjoyable, and the cops of Marseille are a breath of fresh air. Full of quotes from Claude Levi-Strauss, who was a hero of mine, long time ago. Reccommended.<br />
<br />
All we read is thrillers now. Puzzles dark and dreadful. It worries me, but then I read the news again, oh boy, and I think I know why. <br />
<br />
<br />
PS, click throught the keynote swift image to hear Maria Callas. Unearthly. A voice like no other. Sorry about the ad intro. There may be a nifty way to cut it out completely, but since I don't know how, just skip the first 15seconds<br />
<br />
<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/260-Kairos-2-Days-Free-Download.html" rel="alternate" title="Kairos: 2 Days Free Download" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-05-07T14:04:36Z</issued>
        <created>2013-05-07T14:04:36Z</created>
        <modified>2013-05-08T14:58:54Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=260</wfw:comment>
        <slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/260-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Kairos: 2 Days Free Download</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
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                <!-- s9ymdb:208 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="217" height="327" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/Kairoscoverimage.jpg" alt="" /> Wednesday 8th May. Rain in the night, and a soft grey day to follow, a frog and a toad in the fish-pool (not together, of course: minding their own business at opposite ends). And now I realise what I've been missing for so long out there. Slugs and snails have appeared in force! <br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Kairos-ebook/dp/B00CLCTGP0/ref=sr_1_5?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1368016637&sr=1-5&keywords=gwyneth+jones">Kairos: Free download from Amazon Kindle May 10th and May 11th</a><br />
<br />
It had to be added to the e-collection, for completism, but for years, I've thought of Kairos as terminally obsolete. All near-future sf is doomed to be blatantly at odds with the facts before long &amp; often it doesn't matter a great deal: but who would want to read about such a shabby, debt-ridden, paranoid alternative present? This beleagured feminist bookshop owner, with her girlfriend going crazy on the scrapheap of graduate unemployment, and her scrabbling samizdat networks of protest. Their ex-friends, the well-heeled gay couple, in danger whenever they step out of their ghetto with the invisible walls. The unlikely great gulf that's opened up, swallowing the prosperity of the masses, in the heart of Western Civilisation... <em>Homophobia</em>? Thing of the past, to suggest otherwise is just insulting. <em>Feminist? </em> Can anyone even say the word without embarrassing themselves? <em>Protest?</em> Nobody does that! There's no such thing! <br />
<br />
But time is a helix, and Otto Murray's world, now technically a fictional version of our recent past ("first decade of the twentyfirst century" is the only date you get for the action), looks weirdly familiar. Or at least I thought so, when I was preparing the text for epub*. The despair of the debt-ridden. Food Banks. Riots. Financial collapse. Second, third and more generations of the traditionally unemployed (or zero hours contracted), festering in the hinterland. The Secret State. Occupy and all that. And that "Islamic War" (though we don't call it that, and "we" have had troops on the ground; probably will have again), its shadow growing and growing... Strange omissions and skewed assumptions begin to stand out, like clumsy period touches in a novel supposed to be about the Eighties, but clearly written just the other day.<br />
<br />
Those BREAKTHRU reps! Stalking the dissidents in their golden, sexed-up, angelic fancy-dress. Straight off Top Of The Pops, circa 1984. No digital networking devices (an absence that kept bothering me). And I notice I assumed there'd be a much heavier dependence on Nuclear Power by now. More serious accidents too, andpeople would just live with the consequences... Bit ahead of myself there, still: I blame Chernobyl. But I had the obsession with fancy food right down!<br />
<br />
The shocking parts are still shocking. I remember, a friend of mine (Rachel Pollack, I think) said she really, <em>really</em> couldn't take what happens between Otto and her former best friend, James Esumare. She's dead right, it's awful. But it seemed necessary to me, and still does. <em>Bad things, bad things come running out, when the old house falls down...</em><br />
<strong><br />
Reviews: One contemporary and one modern.</strong> <br />
<br />
(NB, academic interest only. If by chance you'd like to read the book without knowing how things turn out, beware "spoilers" esp. in the Niall Harrison essay. Stuffed with them.)<br />
<br />
<a href="http://sfmistressworks.wordpress.com/2011/08/08/kairos-gwyneth-jones-2/"><br />
http://sfmistressworks.wordpress.com/2011/08/08/kairos-gwyneth-jones-2/</a><br />
<br />
"...a peculiarly British drabness..."<br />
<br />
<a href="http://archive.catholicherald.co.uk/article/27th-january-1989/6/bleak-and-cruel-in-a-cheerless-new-world">http://archive.catholicherald.co.uk/article/27th-january-1989/6/bleak-and-cruel-in-a-cheerless-new-world</a><br />
<br />
"...THERE are moments in life when you suspect yourself of harbouring old-fashioned notions..."<br />
<br />
<br />
<strong>The Cosmic Background</strong><br />
<br />
Whatever else it is, Kairos definitely isn't anything like sci-fi anymore. Not a scrap. So why does the epub of this socially radical supernatural thriller share a cover design with the "Space Race", hard sf based <em>Escape Plans</em>? Sheer laziness? <br />
<br />
Not at all! It's me method-acting, thinking like a real sci-fi publisher...<br />
<br />
No, there's a proper reason. With <em>Escape Plans</em>, I made a conscious decision to tell the same story, the story of the Great Escape that sf longs for, as in <em>Divine Endurance</em>, but in a different context. When I got to <em>Kairos</em> I felt I had a theme and variations going. What if the people who long for change, who hunger and thirst for change, who endure persecution in the name of a new heaven and a new earth, should suddenly be overwhelmed by change itself, by the "moment" when everything leaps into another state, on the most humungous scale imaginable? They haven't a clue what's happening. This is not a disaster movie, <em>nobody</em> has a clue: and yet, inextricably, they are defining the outcome. Deciding which side up the coin lands just by being there; being the observers. <br />
<br />
There's this version of the Standard Model (or there was, I haven't heard of it for a while), where the expansion of the universe ends in a contraction, called The Big Crunch. And then everything just starts expanding again, only with <em>all the rules reversed.</em>. That sounds appealing, I thought, as a lover of puns. <br />
<br />
Didn't James Tiptree say, <em>It'll never change, unless it all changes</em>...?<br />
<br />
<br />
Arguably, the yellow figure inscribed on the cosmic background should be a tesseract or something for <em>Kairos</em>, in homage to another ancient and dodgy supernatural thriller, called <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Many-Dimensions-Charles-Williams/dp/080281221X"><em>Many Dimensions</em></a>. But I couldn't figure out how to draw a tesseract in Paint, so I had to make do.<br />
<br />
*This e-edition is revised from the original 1988 hardcover digital files. There are no material changes, but it may not be identical with the Gollancz 1995 paperback.<br />
<br />
 Anyway, that's the lot. <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kairos-ebook/dp/B00CLCTGP0/ref=sr_1_8?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1368016701&sr=1-8">Kairos Free Download Amazon Kindle store May 10th May 11th</a><br />
<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/259-Our-Neighbours....html" rel="alternate" title="Our Neighbours..." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-05-07T13:30:32Z</issued>
        <created>2013-05-07T13:30:32Z</created>
        <modified>2013-05-07T13:30:32Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=259</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/259-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Our Neighbours...</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
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                <!-- s9ymdb:207 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="200" height="192" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/1-P1020187.JPG" alt="" /> Tuesday 7th May, a beautiful warm clear morning, soft overcast gathering now. Still no swifts but I won't give up on them yet. The migrants are all arriving late, and a pack of swifts were spotted yesterday, passing the <a href="http://www.migraction.net/index.php?m_id=112&graph=synthesis&action=list&frmSite=9&year=2013&frmSpecies=0&frmPrePost=-&frmDoy=125&f=0">Pointe de Grave </a>and heading this way. Maybe we'll yet see them again here in Roundhill, one more time. See left for a photo of my neighbours, the gulls. Hobbies include dropping moss, pooing copiously, and staring at Milo through the landing window, on purpose to annoy him (Ginger is hard to wind up). Last week, one of the couple came up and rapped on the glass. But I am not yet scared. Time was, not so many years ago, our teeming colony of rooftop-nesting Herring Gulls kept us  awake, screaming and yelling and having neighbourly fights, all the way from May to October. No longer... Silence of the Gulls. I'd like to think they've moved on, but their amber status on the RSPB list seems to tell me different. Population in steep decline, same old story. Even Herring Gulls! This is the second year these two have nested on my chimneystack, I know they lost at least one chick last year (found its broken little body).  Hope they have better luck this time.<br />
<br />
What a busy holiday weekend! Have been thanked by Ed Milliband for helping him to win a terrific victory (Honestly, Ed, it was nothing). Have walked out in the Ouse watermeadows, spying on fish and frogs and  birds &amp; collecting mud. Have set out to go bluebell-viewing (Saturday), but turned back owing to having noticed it was cold, grey, actually raining quite hard and those Weather Persons had been just plain LYING to us... Have temporarily wrecked my back, gardening on Sunday, and spent the really pretty day (Monday) flat on it, watching the sky...<br />
<br />
<br />
<strong>Escape Plans, PS: </strong><br />
<br />
I'm charmed to see how many of you have taken up the free download challenge (passing 250, last time I looked. Wow); despite me trying to scare you off. If any of you actually reads the book, <em>and can prove it</em>, I'll have to think up some sort of prize. Another PS: the second of Peter's birthday books (the ones that failed to arrive and worried me) was <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Tubes-Journey-Internet-Andrew-Blum/dp/0061994936/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1367935327&sr=1-2&keywords=tubes+andrew+blum"><em>Tubes</em></a>, Andrew Blum "A Journey To The Centre Of The Internet". I thought this would be gonzo journalism, given Blum's Wired credentials, and I thought it would be an overnight sensation, given the content. It isn't and it wasn't, though it has taken off now. In fact the prose style, pedestrian and often clunky, is its weakest point (other weakest point, clearly a little bit gagged: these are people eg the mighty Google, you wouldn't want to mess with). But gripping, eventually, and a thorough education in what that cute term "the Cloud" really means. Not at all about the Systems that actually keep us alive, maybe, but still, an admirable profile of the digital entity (or entities) that was God: the way it happens in the real world 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/258-Escape-Plans-2-Days-Free-Download.html" rel="alternate" title="Escape Plans: 2 Days Free Download" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-05-02T11:27:17Z</issued>
        <created>2013-05-02T11:27:17Z</created>
        <modified>2013-05-03T13:16:18Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=258</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/258-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Escape Plans: 2 Days Free Download</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
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                <!-- s9ymdb:209 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="212" height="319" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/1-P1020185.JPG" alt="" /> Thursday 2nd May, blue sky, bright gardens &amp; it's actually warm out there. And here's the epub cover of <em>Escape Plans</em>, which I've finally managed to make available on Kindle. <br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CJB51IE">Download it for free on Monday 6th  or Tuesday 7th May<br />
</a><br />
One fine day, I realised the shocking truth: I was going to die. I remember the occasion distinctly. I know where I was (the Protestant Cemetery, Singapore); I know how old I was (28), I know how I was feeling (happy). I even know what I was wearing, all that's missing is exactly <em>why</em> this distant future event was suddenly immediate. <br />
<br />
Maybe it was because all my dreams had come true. Ever since I could remember, I had longed to be an explorer, to fly away from Manchester, to fly away from grey England.  I'd plotted the great escape &amp; here I was, having an adventure, living the dream. Like <a href="http://allpoetry.com/poem/8517919-Godfrey_Gordon_Gustavus_Gore-by-William_Brighty_Rands">Godfrey Gordon Gustvus Gore</a>, I'd sailed away (Quantas flight really) to Singapore. Walked on tropic beaches, braved the waves on Kuta Beach: climbed volcanoes, seen the Ramayana Ballet by moonlight. Got very lost in Bali, wandering in the green rice fields. . . And I was writing a novel about the greatest escape of all. The end of our humanity, the costly, glorious breakthrough into a new heaven and a new earth.<br />
<br />
Science Fiction's all about cool faraway places; travellers' tales. Everybody does it. But by the time Divine Endurance was published, I'd done with the borrowed Eastern Mysticism, the science indistinguishable from magic. I was getting into computers, teaching myself to program, loving <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Right-Stuff-Tom-Wolfe/dp/0312427565/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1367586349&sr=1-1&keywords=The+Right+Stuff">The Right Stuff</a> and <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Soul-New-Machine-Tracy-Kidder/dp/0316491977/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1367586263&sr=1-1&keywords=the+soul+of+a+new+machine">The Soul Of A New Machine</a>, (the 1981 version) and for my next trick (<a href="http://www.depauw.edu/sfs/backissues/71/jonesess.htm">an attack of conscience, maybe</a>?), I planned to stick to my own culture, and Western Mysticism, the monotheism that has shaped so much of modern science. And by "Western", I'm afraid I also mean you, dear Muslim cousins in the Faith: sorry about that. This time I would tell the story of the Great Escape (my favourite topic) in Space Age, hard science/fiction terms. No miracles, only strict, rational extrapolation from the cusp of the present. I had no idea I was thinking like a cyberpunk. <br />
<br />
Things are not looking too good. The Space Race has run aground. The solar system is a cold desert, good for mining, or extreme tourism, <em>really</em> not worth the work or the expense of colonisation. The stars are out of reach, and worst news of all, <em>where are those aliens? </em>. What if the answer to Fermi's very good question is that they are not here because <em>we</em> are not <em>there</em>? What if there's a party going on, outside our sad bubble (I was very taken with Stephen Hawking's Bubble Universes), but we're not invited. Nobody can even reach us with an invitation. Maybe out there, beyond the crystal sphere, there is no death, there is no end to the adventure... We'll never know, it's not for us. For us, this is it, short lives, eternal exclusion.<br />
<br />
Here we are, then. The VENTURans are descended (ie fictionally) from the heroes of the Space Race. They speak an evolved form of English called Acronymic. It's like listening-in to the chit-chat between Houston and an Apollo mission, a little hard for natural English speakers to follow. The Subs, the elite of the downtrodden masses left behind, firmly believe the best chance of getting out of jail is to become a machine process. True to Turing, they know (computer) logic operations cannot be bound by our bubble: the same rules must apply throughout the universe. They are also pretty hard to follow... Then there's ALIC, who blunders about being a tourist, so she can have a few things explained to her, for your benefit, dear reader (but not too many). There's Millie Mohun, who may or may not be a messenger from the Outside, come to tell us what we have to do to escape, <em>out of the body of this death</em>. And there's Yolande, the brilliant Sub intellectual, who takes the Millie idea and runs with it... <br />
<br />
No miracles. Millie Mohun <em>might</em> be the Messenger. Or she might simply be a charismatic Sub teacher with a problem past. Nothing supernatural. Only the longing, and the mysterious way ALIC ends up, the feelings and the changes that she can't explain.<br />
<br />
It's a challenging read. The critics, back then, were probably kinder than I deserved. <br />
<br />
But it never occured to me that having an all female cast (except for one handsome young man, for decorative purposes) would be a problem. He even gets some of the best lines.<br />
<br />
"<em>lesbian tripe that chokes the reader with jargon</em>"<br />
Brian Stableford, Foundation<br />
<br />
"<em>If there was an award for the novel with the most acryonyms, this would win hands down" </em> goodreads<br />
<br />
"<em>Cyberpunk SF is a very American product: the nearest thing to a British version is Gwyneth Jones's novel Escape Plans, which is fairly heavy going to begin with (lots of jargon and horrible acronyms) but opens out into a nastily persuasive vision of a future world where computer systems have been so absorbed into our environment that they virtually are the whole environment."<br />
</em> Dave Langford PCW Plus 1987<br />
<br />
"<em>Genuinely twisted</em>..." Bruce Sterling, Cheap Truth 1986<br />
<br />
You have been warned!<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Escape-Plans-ebook/dp/B00CJB51IE/ref=tmm_kin_title_0/277-2570797-8818840">Free download, if you're still interested: Monday May 6th, Tuesday May 7th<br />
</a><br />
<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/256-Swifts,-Sainsburys-and-the-Bees.html" rel="alternate" title="Swifts, Sainsburys and the Bees" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-05-01T14:28:12Z</issued>
        <created>2013-05-01T14:28:12Z</created>
        <modified>2013-05-02T09:01:51Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=256</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/256-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Swifts, Sainsburys and the Bees</title>
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                <!-- s9ymdb:91 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="144" height="165" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/swift.jpg" alt="" /> Wednesday 1st May, another clear blue sky day, a fraction more warmth than last week, but when did I last see the trees still bare on May day? I'd have to search the archives.<br />
<br />
Why is it so cold?<br />
<br />
It's the east wind.<br />
It's a blocking system possibly caused by, erm, arctic meltwater or something odd like that<br />
It's climate change, it means everyone gets more extreme weather more often &amp; it can be just nasty, as well as weird and spectacular. <br />
It's thermohaline circulation starting to break down, which would be so awful, nobody would tell us.<br />
It's because the government won't pay any attention to the scientists<br />
It's because there will be no votes in paying attention to climate change until things get much worse than this. Which they will.<br />
It's the immigrants, they make it cold by taking our jobs.<br />
It's the poor, they eat too much <br />
It's the great turtle sneezing<br />
<br />
Take your pick!<br />
<br />
I made up that list in March, hopefully it's now out of date, and the weather will become glorious. It's been so cold and bitter down here, for so long, I only realised at the weekend that I should have been expecting the swifts, and searching the skies for them. Not this year. Some are coming in over Devon, but only a couple of vagrants have been spotted in Sussex. Will our surviving handful of Black Arrows make it to Brighton, one more time? I hope they do.<br />
<br />
<strong>Sainsburys and the Bees</strong><br />
<br />
So, on Monday, <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22335520">the EU voted on the neonicotinoids, and a moratorium on their use was declared </a>(a news item that lasted about 10 minutes on the BBC's front page, despite clearly attracting a huge amount of public interest). Our man Owen Patterson, despite our protests, <a href="http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/04/23-5">despite overwhelming scientific</a>, political and public support for a ban, voted as his natural loyalties dictated, in favour of Bayer and Syngenta (the makers of the pesticides)*.  I suppose there's no use telling any of these people that you can't eat money.  <br />
<br />
<a href="http://en.avaaz.org/1326/eu-ban-bee-killing-pesticides-bayer">http://en.avaaz.org/1326/eu-ban-bee-killing-pesticides-bayer</a><br />
<br />
On the other hand, I thought Sainsburys might listen to reason. Rival supermarket giant Waitrose had already told its suppliers they must stop using clothianidin, imidacloprid and thiametoxam on crops attractive to pollinators, before the vote. So why not? I decided to start lobbying. After all, they've got a lovely page about <a href="http://www.j-sainsbury.co.uk/responsibility/case-studies/2011/bee-hotels/">Bee Hotels up on Sainsburys plc</a>. . . So far, I've asked them why they weren't following Waitrose's example, and @customerservices has told me (once they'd figured out what I was on about, sort of) that Sainsburys  is committed to cuddling the environment, and loves all living things to bits, but outlawing dangerous yet profitable pesticides would be taking things too far. Now I've written again, asking them what they plan to do about the moratorium.<br />
<br />
I'll let you know how I get on.<br />
<br />
<br />
<strong>Watching</strong> <br />
<br />
<em>The Innkeepers</em>, Indie horror (TUH!) which I was looking forward to but missed at the Dukes so I recorded it off the tv. Utterly futile. BUT we then watched <em>Evil Dead II</em>, as Gabriel was down for the weekend and had it by him. Utterly glorious, unequalled classic, although I'm not convinced streaming things through the Wii really works.<br />
<br />
And the latest tv Swedish police procedural, <em>"Arne Dahl"</em> (why the writer gets that special billing I don't know; maybe a form of iconic jumper?). Grows on you.<br />
<br />
<strong>Reading</strong><br />
<br />
<em>New Scientist</em>. For weeks I never get round to reading New Scientist, and I have been guilty of complaining that it's just the same old feature stories, recycled over and over since circa 1984; also guilty of gnashing my teeth over the dreadful tide of human interest and social issues material. Enough! Keep it for your Facebook page! But for some reason I've just been feasting on about a month's supply of really thrilling, nifty and exciting stuff.  Top favourites, the vr development that will allow (eg) gamesplayers to run around loose in an immersive virtual world, never bumping into each other or walking through walls (unless the game wants them to); while actually confined in a room not much bigger than somebody's back bedroom. This is just what I needed for the games arenas in <em>North Wind</em> and <em>Phoenix Cafe</em>! And then last week (Quantum Deep Space, 20th April), <em>finally</em>, the experiment that tests quantum theory against general relativity. Satellite mediated, China facilitated, do the weird phenomena (eg, entanglement, and the collapsing wave function thing that backs quantum cryptography) survive in the bigger picture? Or do they vanish! <br />
<br />
That's been a long time coming. Very exciting. And who will have the last laugh this time? Einstein or the good lord? <br />
<br />
<strong>Clictivism</strong><br />
<br />
Good news from the Brighton front line: after a council meeting on 30th April, the Seven Dials elm (<a href="https://twitter.com/SaveOurTree">@saveourtree</a>) is saved. More bad news from Brighton: yet another school playing field is to go under, if Mr Gove has his way &amp; one of those new kind of private schools to go on top of it. Already used by several schools, the playing fields would be sacrificed and replaced by an influx of kids getting bused in from outside the area...  Please <a href="https://www.change.org/en-GB/petitions/rt-hon-michael-gove-mp-secretary-of-state-for-education-drop-proposal-to-build-new-school-on-bhasvic-field">consider signing the petition</a><br />
<br />
*Honestly, I bet they don't even care, I bet they don't reward this toadying at all. It's just a lobbying reflex big corporations have: anybody wants to ban something we sell (eg tobacco cigarettes), we stop them, no holds barred. We don't think about it all. Because we can. 
            </div>
        </content>

        
    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/255-Ash-Dieback-Season-Two.html" rel="alternate" title="Ash Dieback: Season Two" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-04-23T15:47:48Z</issued>
        <created>2013-04-23T15:47:48Z</created>
        <modified>2013-04-25T09:00:04Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=255</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/255-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Ash Dieback: Season Two</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
            <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
                <a href="http://www.growsonyou.com/photo/slideshow/80294-ash-tree-flowers"><a class='serendipity_image_link' href=''><!-- s9ymdb:204 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="302" height="403" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/Ash_tree_flowers.jpg" alt="" /></a></a> Tuesday 23rd April. Cold sea, warm sun. Morning mist takes a while to clear, down here by the seaside, but when it burns off the skies are blue, the afternoons pleasant enough for people in the street to shed layers. The meal worms vanish swiftly, the goldfinches flirt about, and the blackbirds sing and sing. My tadpoles are doing well. <br />
<br />
Spring at last, and the waiting is over, the seeing has begun. What's going to happen to the ash trees? Will they be gone in a decade, devastating our landscape? <br />
<br />
Over the winter the defra scorecard has shown a steady increase in infected sites (484 currently): but outside East Anglia these sites are still, almost without exception, infected <em> new plantings</em>, ie, nursery reared saplings imported from infected countries in continental Europe, or else (which is the way the Woodland Trust got caught out) seedlings from the UK, exported to continental European nurseries; infected while reared there and then imported back here). How are things going to change, when the buds begin to break? Maybe not at all. Maybe chalara fraxinea doesn't actually spread like wildfire over here? Maybe the infection hits resistance as soon as it leaves East Anglia? Or some other kind of obstacle? Or maybe, and more likely, alas, the defra survey is just very limited... I have no idea.<br />
<br />
I was reminded, up in Cumbria, how important these trees are to me. The lovely wayward growth of their branches in winter, their place in folklore (ash will be late this year, held back by the long, cold winter). Those iconic black buds, and the individual trees that have become part of my psychological landscape. I wish there was something I could do. A few weeks ago I asked the Sussex Wildlife Trust what plans they had for responding to the outbreak. Monitoring the ash woodlands on their reserves? Identifying and reported infections, and keeping an eye out for resistance? Maybe training volunteers to help with that task? Or with clearing away infected leaf litter, so the trees don't get re-infected? (It takes several doses of the fungus to overwhelm a tree of any size, &amp; the spores lurk in fallen leaves) I got a cheerful "no not really! We just plan to let it happen" response. And the advice that, though it will be "frustrating" to watch so many trees die, I'd better get used to it. The same message is repeated in the latest SWT mailing to members. A little <em>frustrating</em>, indeed: but understandable, I suppose. There's an awful lot of ash trees in Sussex, especially in the West. In West Sussex, second most wooded county in England, holding 40% of our surviving ancient woodland, the dominant broad-leaved tree is ash, and they're all over the place, not neatly concentrated.<br />
<br />
On the other hand, information is power, or sometimes consolation. <br />
<br />
I was bemused at first by news that the <a href="http://www.forestry.gov.uk/newsrele.nsf/web-allbysubject/30F000836D819B9E80257B3B0047D45D">Forestry Commission plan</a> to combat chalara involved planting 250,000 young ash trees. What's the use of that?  They'll just die! But <a href="http://www.buryfreepress.co.uk/news/health/east-anglia-leads-the-uk-s-fight-against-ash-dieback-1-4974757">the saplings are to be planted in East Anglia</a>, native stock, genetically diverse, they will be exposed to infection and hopefully some of them will prove resistant.<br />
<br />
I've learned from other sources (actually, a Gardener's World article, which I take to be fairly trustworthy), that it's not a complete wipe-out. Young trees will certainly die if they get infected, and in months not years. Trees from 10-20 years old will <em>probably</em> succumb, a little more slowly. Trees from 20-40 yrs have a better chance of fighting off the infection, they will get sick, but survive for years. And "There is little evidence that mature trees, over 40 yrs old, will ever be overwhelmed by the disease alone..."<br />
<br />
So that's good news. With the caveat that a tree struggling with a serious fungal infection is far more vulnerable to other pests and trauma.<br />
<br />
Anyway, here's what the National Trust has to say:<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/article-1355776163480/">http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/article-1355776163480/</a><br />
<br />
 &amp; here's a report from Plant Science<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.plantsci.org.uk/news/ash-dieback-research-funding-and-policy-news-3-april-2013">http://www.plantsci.org.uk/news/ash-dieback-research-funding-and-policy-news-3-april-2013</a><br />
<br />
Coda:<br />
<br />
In Cumbria a couple of weeks ago we met the larch tree killer, phytophthora ramorum, face to face: there's an infection in the Japanese Garden, Eskdale Green. But all the larches are on their way out, along with most of the mature conifers, no matter what. To be replaced by native woodland (leaving an awful Paschendale landscape of stumps in the meantime; it's not a pretty process) Ironic, huh? Wordsworth fulminated against <a href="http://laudatortemporisacti.blogspot.co.uk/2010/05/comminations-and-maledictions.html">those larches</a>, but by my time they were beautiful: vivid green in spring, red-gold in autumn, haunt of red squirrels, goldcrests; silence. . . It's natural, it's normal, all things must pass, pests will come and go, and occasionally we must expect a devastating disease (cf <a href="http://wine.about.com/od/vineyardvocab/g/Phylloxera.htm">the Great Wine Blight</a>): the "nature" we have made will recover, <em>with help</em>.  <br />
<br />
The threats just mustn't come too thick and fast, or our managed, anthropogenic "nature" will not change and move on. It will become degraded, impoverished and unrecognisable. Intervention needs to be stepped up, on every scale, to deal with the world we live in, not the "let nature take its course" world we may fondly remember.<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/254-Occupy-Sussex.html" rel="alternate" title="Occupy Sussex" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-04-22T15:14:31Z</issued>
        <created>2013-04-22T15:14:31Z</created>
        <modified>2013-04-23T07:48:57Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=254</wfw:comment>
        <slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/254-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Occupy Sussex</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
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                <!-- s9ymdb:203 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="300" height="298" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/occupation1-300x298.jpeg" alt="" /> Monday 21st April, light rain overnight, followed by another fine day, chill breeze, honey sun, soft cloud. It is definitely Spring. As we walked up through Stanmer Park on Friday evening, bud-break was all around us in the young trees, including the threatened ash, and looking richer than in other years; and while we were eating at Stanmer Pub, a bat flitted over the cricket lawn outside, in the calm evening.<br />
<br />
To the Magistrates Court last Thursday, in solidarity with the four students arrested during the heavy-handed police action to break up the Occupation of Bramber House (a protest against privatisation: you can read about it here: <a href="http://sussexagainstprivatization.wordpress.com/save-the-occupation/">http://sussexagainstprivatization.wordpress.com/save-the-occupation/</a> and here: <a href="http://www.defendtherighttoprotest.org/brutal-eviction-of-sussex-students-today/">http://www.defendtherighttoprotest.org/brutal-eviction-of-sussex-students-today/</a> Conversation turned to colour-bagging. Red is the People's Flag; True Blue is Tory. Orangey gold is (among other afiliations) whatstheirnames, the didn'tyouusedtobetheLiberals. Green is the Party of Social Justice, and the Environment (Davy Jones, prospective Green Party parliamentary candidate for Kemptown, had turned up too. Good for him). Pink is spoken for, the Rainbow is spoken for. Can we have yellow as the colour of Protest? It's not going to work. Yellow is the colour of nondenominational warning, <em>watch out</em>; the police and others have got dibbs on it. It's the Imperial colour in China, anyway.<br />
<br />
But I commend these young people. It's heartening to know (from <a href="https://twitter.com/occupy_sussex">#Occupy Sussex </a>that the University of Central Lancashire sity today decided to drop privatisation plans. So, not quite in vain, kids. Even if you do get criminal records.<br />
<br />
<strong>Watching</strong><br />
 <br />
Most of <a href="http://www.efilmcritic.com/review.php?movie=1010">Zefirelli's Hamlet</a> movie last night. Pretty dire! (despite Glenn Close's sprightly, manic Gertrude: clearly maxed-out on mother's little helpers). But at least Peter now knows that this elusive play is indeed <em>stuffed </em>with quotations.<br />
<br />
And <em>Broadchurch</em>. Who did it, eh? If this had been the real world, my money would have been on that strange bloke who has popped up from time to time, proffering messages from the beyond, but I must have missed the episode where he is put out of the running. Also <em>Scott and Bailey</em> although I'm getting a bit tired (already, two shows in) of the Ooop North stereotyping. I don't even like Manchester, I was just born there, but there's more to the old Blingsville that this. London is not the only great city in the UK, or even in England, thanks.<br />
<br />
<strong>Buying</strong><br />
<br />
Sorted out the palm oil free soap. If you feel like splashing out look no further than the RSPB Dipper range: <a href="http://shopping.rspb.org.uk/gifts-toys/skinny-dipper-toiletries.html">http://shopping.rspb.org.uk/gifts-toys/skinny-dipper-toiletries.html</a><br />
<br />
We are currently using <a href="http://www.aleppogold.com/">Aleppo Gold</a>, the entry level one, and it's fine. Thick primitive chunks, smelling of bay laurel, very long lasting. <a href="http://www.ethicalsuperstore.com/products/oliva/oliva-olive-oil-soap-125g/">Oliva</a> is also good, and you're likely to have a local stockist.<br />
<br />
<br />
<strong>Reading</strong><br />
<br />
Just finished <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Birds-Britannica-Mark-Cocker/dp/0701169079">Mark Crocker and Richard Mabey's Birds Britannica</a>, that Peter got me for my birthday. I loved this book, mighty tome that it is; you wouldn't want to drop it on your foot. Not enough pictures, though. &amp; it's chilling to realise how many more household name bird populations have <em>plunged</em>, just in the last few years (since this quirky catalogue was compiled ie). The swift, the skylark, the lapwing, the cuckoo. . . I could go on. I won't.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sword-at-Sunset-Rosemary-Sutcliff/dp/1556527594">Sword at Sunset</a> &amp; <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Once-Future-King-T-White/dp/0006483011">The Once And Future King</a>. Arthuriana classics I bought 2nd hand for Peter, when I thought his birthday books wouldn't arrive. Was meaning to buy them for his ereader, but got warned off by reviews of the quality of the transcription (I keep running into this issue). Sword At Sunset, Rosemary Sutcliff (1963), richly supplied with gory, set-piece battles, lovingly worked out; an unexpected wealth of heart-catching,  nature writing. Tiny bit fascist. It's absorbing, but grim, far grimmer than I remembered it The certainty of doom and of personal disaster are ever present. Sort of Arthur as Macbeth. (I probably didn't mind this when I was a teenager, probably just found it romantic). The Once And Future King, T H White. Some people swear by this one, but the famous love affair doesn't half go on a bit. I'll think I'll stick with <em>The Sword In The Stone</em>. And memo to self, re-read <em>The Goshawk</em>.<br />
<br />
 <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/253-Its-Only-A-Tree.-But.-.-..html" rel="alternate" title="It's Only A Tree. But. . ." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-04-17T15:15:17Z</issued>
        <created>2013-04-17T15:15:17Z</created>
        <modified>2013-04-17T16:44:25Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=253</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/253-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">It's Only A Tree. But. . .</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
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                <a href="https://twitter.com/awatrees/status/310060891540430850"><!-- s9ymdb:202 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="463" height="582" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/BE2OvPOCIAAs3aK.jpglarge.jpg" alt="" /></a> Wednesday 17th April, mild windless air; a soft overcast, downy grey and white quilted and threadbare blue. Forsythia and Almond blossom spring-flower gardens and birdsong outside my window. Coming down from Cumbria, having been, for a week or two, as offline as humanly possible if you leave all the chargers at home, we were quite shocked when the trees remained leafless as we hit the sunny south, but now I do believe Spring has sprung. Yesterday I brought in the traditional bowl of tadpoles, and placed a rather over-powering sugary hyacinth bouquet by my bed, to replace (at last) the chaste ivy and pine of the New Year. <br />
<br />
I kind of miss the ivy and the pine, but their turn will come round again.<br />
<br />
With some trepidation I checked SaveOurTree, and I'm glad to report the Seven Dials Elms (although there's some controversy about "root-trimming" going on today) seems to have made it through the B&H Council's lengthy deliberations. . . So far. Don't count on it. But a small triumph, as I have said, over Mr Gradgrind, and the whole brutal project of the so-called profit-motivated, so-called <em>aspirational</em> mindset: <em>the sensible life, whose only passion is hatred</em>, and a local news story that's been a useful corrective to popular assumptions. Everybody was having fun, last month, about the spluttering and shuffling of the "Green" controlled Council of Brighton&Hove. Greens caught in the act of planning to chop down a hundred year old elm tree! One of the sacred urban elms in this last stronghold of the English Elm, for no very good reason at all! What were they <em>thinking</em>!!. . <br />
Many feeble excuses and much flailing about later, the genuine explanation seems to be that our Council, lead by our Green Council leader, looked at the tree, saw nothing of particular value, and <em>didn't realise there would be a fuss</em>. Fine. But why didn't they realise the tree was valuable all by themselves? <br />
<br />
Maybe the answer is that the <a href="http://www.greenparty.org.uk/">Green Party</a> is not now, if it ever was, the party of the Natural World. Social Justice, yes (and a very necessary role too!). But trees, now: trees have to come last. <em>A caring, inclusive and democratic Green society will enable everyone to do valuable work, follow their interests, interact with their community and enjoy nature. A Green government will have the courage to pursue responsible solutions to our social, economic and environmental crises through its commitment to fairness, citizen participation, shared responsibility, peace and environmental protection.</em> <br />
<br />
I don't want to be mean, I hope the Green Party is a <em>little</em> more sincere than the "greenest government ever" but Dave Cameron's copywriter could easily have penned that lot.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://birdpoem.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/can-you-hear-nightingales-sing.html">Nightingales may still be silenced at Lodge Hill</a>, whichever Party is pulling the trigger. Trees and little brown birds really cannot be at the forefront or in the foreground for any party aspiring to govern. There's only one way to minimise the losses: to keep these people on their toes, we have to convince them, and keep on convincing them, that trees, and little brown birds, can vote. That there IS a party of the Natural World, and honestly, it isn't altogether, or even mainly, about "Green Jobs" or "Sustaining Economic Growth Responsibly". It's about the natural world for its own sake, it's about things many people aren't prepared to sacrifice; it's just for love. <br />
<br />
PS Dear Plashing, thanks for the <a href="http://kryptonradio.com/2013/03/23/electroluminescent-paint/">electroluminescent paint </a>link. I don't think you could get <em>straight </em>from this stuff to Aoxomoxoa's neurologically controlled skull mask, but it's definitely a step on the way. <br />
<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/252-Actually,-back-in-the-olden-days....html" rel="alternate" title="Actually, back in the olden days..." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-03-12T10:42:29Z</issued>
        <created>2013-03-12T10:42:29Z</created>
        <modified>2013-03-12T10:53:24Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=252</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/252-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Actually, back in the olden days...</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
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                <!-- s9ymdb:194 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="320" height="240" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/1-P1020095.JPG" alt="" /> Tuesday 12th March. Snow is easing now; gleams of brilliant sun outdoors. Have moved my white camellia into the greenhouse, hope I did that in time; also filled the bird feeders, but there don't seem to be many takers.<br />
<br />
Actually, back in the olden days, before there was climate change, I remember this was the normal weather in March, in Cumbria (where we'll be in a week or two). From one day to the next, vicious cold winds and snow, then sun and all the flowers (of course, above 2000ft it could get very nasty: I remember a legendary exploit with my older sister, making our way along Striding Edge in a blizzard, and promising each other we would try to fall on the Patterdale side, because it was more human down there, although we would be dead...) I've been thinking about the traffic too. Why all this grinding to a halt? It never used to happen, not even in the eighties, when we last had a run of cold winters in Sussex. What's the difference? (Allowing that cutting down the trees that sheltered Handcross Hill wasn't a good idea*). It's purely the density. There are too many cars, and this has happened in the last twenty years. That's what makes winter weather intolerable, infuriating and all that for all the hordes of drivers. What's the solution? We need fewer cars! So simple. And stop cutting down trees!<br />
<br />
 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/251-A-Conversation-with-FriendsLife....html" rel="alternate" title="A Conversation with FriendsLife..." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-03-11T11:01:01Z</issued>
        <created>2013-03-11T11:01:01Z</created>
        <modified>2013-03-11T16:46:39Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=251</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/251-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">A Conversation with FriendsLife...</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
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                <!-- s9ymdb:194 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="320" height="240" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/1-P1020095.JPG" alt="" /> Monday 11th March, snow. A healthy dusting of white deposited overnight, but now it's really snowing. It's snowing quite hard. Have made several attempts to get my son (down for the weekend) out of bed. Gabriel, it's snowing, Gabriel, there's delays at Three Bridges, <em>Gabriel</em>... I think he's stirring now.<br />
<br />
<strong>A conversation with my pension provider</strong><br />
<br />
Been meaning to make this call for a while...<br />
<br />
The FriendsLife website "members area" is a waste of cyberspace, or was last time I looked, I've given up on it long ago. But that's okay, what I'm doing today is only fun if I talk to a human being.<br />
<br />
I get through at once, no nested options. Points to FL. FriendsLife wants to know how she can help me.<br />
<br />
G: well, it's a query about something in the latest Projected Benefits Illustration your firm sent me. The wording is puzzling. Could you put me through to someone who...<br />
<br />
FL: (resigned tone) No, no, need. I can probably help. Just tell me what your query is.<br />
<br />
G: Oh? Really? Well, okay... It's not about figures at all, it's this bit (reads aloud) "The pension is payable every month in advance for <em>at least five years or until you die</em>." It's that last bit. It just sounds odd. What does it mean "Until you die"? What happens if I don't? Is someone from FriendsLife going to come around and shoot me?<br />
<br />
FL: (It is clear that she has fielded this query often, in varying witty forms, and is tired of it) Laughs lightly. No, no! The pension will go to your next of kin until the end of five years, even if you die. Otherwise, it goes on being paid for the rest of your life.<br />
<br />
G: Oh, good. So, if I live to 3000, FriendsLife will go on paying my pension?<br />
<br />
FL: yes, that's right.<br />
<br />
G: And I don't have to do anything, except keep paying my premiums, and then collect my pension?<br />
<br />
FL: That would be right.<br />
<br />
G (in her head): So. Would you agree that FriendsLife is using that curious wording to avoid using the term <em>lifetime annuity</em>, in the transparent hope that unwary pension fund investors will believe they don't already have a lifetime annuity, and, convinced by the hardsell in the rest of your mailing, will <em>sell</em> the money they put into their pension fund <em>to you</em>, and <em>buy another product</em>, a totally unnecessary transaction from which the firm will cream £XXXX in commission and "administrative costs"???<br />
<br />
My admirably good-tempered friend on the other end of the line has so clearly been teased to death by sarcastic pension customers that I don't bother teasing her any further, and we part friends.<br />
<br />
But watch out!<br />
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/250-Torture-World.html" rel="alternate" title="Torture World" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Gwyneth</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2013-03-08T12:08:24Z</issued>
        <created>2013-03-08T12:08:24Z</created>
        <modified>2013-03-08T14:01:48Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=250</wfw:comment>
        <slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
        <wfw:commentRss>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/rss.php?version=atom0.3&amp;type=comments&amp;cid=250</wfw:commentRss>
    
        <id>http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/index.php?/archives/250-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Torture World</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/">
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                <!-- s9ymdb:46 --><img class="serendipity_image_left" width="400" height="300" style="float: left; border: 0px; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.boldaslove.co.uk/blog/uploads/violets.jpg" alt="" />Friday 8th March, unbroken grey skies, the goldfinches flirting their yellow underwings, a hen blackbird and a fat woodpigeon mooching about, picking up crumbs, a slight persistent rain, that I can see in dimpled rings, steadily forming, one by one, on the surface of the dark fish pool. It still feels springlike out there, but apparently that's not going to last.<br />
<br />
To Amnesty meeting last night, where <a href="http://www.freedomfromtorture.org/sites/default/files/news/Kolbassia%20Haoussou%20-%20Conservative%20Party%20Conference%20-%2008-10-12.pdf">Kolbassia Haossou</a> of Survivors Speak Out talked to us on behalf of his network of torture survivors and <a href="http://www.freedomfromtorture.org/">Freedom From Torture </a>(Was: The Medical Foundation For The Care Of Victims Of Torture, but it doesn't exactly roll off the tongue). I asked him what seemed to me the obvious question: <em>Does <a href="http://www.refugeetherapy.org.uk/">the therapy </a>work? Are you free from torture now? </em> He said no. He said if there were a delete button for the brain, he'd be the first to use it, but there isn't. You learn to live with it, but the place where you were, the things that were done; it's always there, and a chance association can put you back there in a flash. When you've been tortured you can't trust another human being, you can't love anyone, least of all yourself; whenever someone approaches you, you are sure they mean to harm you. . . Speaking for <em>Freedom for Torture</em>, he said, is the way I tell myself they didn't win. They did not silence me.<br />
<br />
We live in torture world, I thought. As long as torture itself is endemic (<em>which it is</em>), then we all live with it, and acceptance of torture is in everything we do, everything we accept. We have all lost our ability to trust, lost our belief in each other, lost the ability to do anything but keep our heads down and ask no questions. We live in fear, that's what's killing our humanity. What is the antidote to this poison? And I thought of that movie NO!, and the laughing, dancing, absurd campaign of defiance. <br />
<br />
Whatever anyone says, whatever Bigelow would have you believe, whatever the CIA and the UK intelligence services. . . er, well, they'd just rather you didn't think about the subject, actually, but anyway, whatever anyone says, torture is not about extracting information, it's about instilling fear. It's about showing who is Master. In Chad, everybody knows what's going on, same as they did in Chile, and everybody (or nearly everybody) keeps quiet, looks the other way, tries not to breathe too loud, never raises their eyes. The next time, it could be you. <em>You</em> could be taken off to the torture camp. Or your dad, your mother, your sisters, your brothers. And what if they suffer because you spoke out? So we don't speak out.<br />
<br />
But here in the UK, tainted but not actually in danger of our lives, here's some clictivism:The reconvened Arms Trade Treaty negotiations are due to begin on 18th March. <a href="http://controlarms.org/en/">Control Arms</a> is asking you to join in a <a href="https://www.thunderclap.it/projects/1490">Thunderclap</a> action. <br />
<br />
<strong>Promoting</strong><br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.drabblecast.org/">Drabblecast </a>is running a month of Women and Aliens stories, one of which will be an abridged version (very nice job, by Nickyt Drayden) of my "The Universe of Things", but don't let that put you off, starts next week, check it out.<br />
<br />
&amp; many thanks to Ant at SF Book Reviews for his review of <a href="http://sfbook.com/divine-endurance.htm   ">The Last Days Of Ranganar</a> (aka Divine Endurance, Flowerdust edition). I'm thrilled, never thought it would get a review.<br />
<br />
<strong>Trending</strong><br />
<br />
Update on the Seven Dials Elm. It's still standing, still defended but still condemned. Will Brighton &amp; Hove's "Green" Council dare to chop down <a href="https://twitter.com/SaveOurTree?uid=154470800&iid=84d4cd12-ece3-49e5-a80d-58c16c1d52f8&nid=5+265&t=1">a tree that's been trending on twitter</a>? I hope not. I hope they find some way to climb down, and <a href="http://www.theargus.co.uk/news/10276516.Elmgate_saga_could_be_over_by_the_afternoon__tree_protesters_claim/">the latest from the Argus </a>sounds positive, but who knows? <br />
<br />
Btw, ENO Traviata: I don't think the eccentricities of the production added anything at all, and the chair and a curtain setting just looked bone-idle lazy. Bizarrely, however, the music was wonderful. <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/classical/features/one-to-watch-corinne-winters-opera-singer-">Corinne Winters</a> was just amazing, electrifying, musically and emotionally, (everybody else had been forbidden to act, but even so, she was ace.)<br />
<br />
<strong>Looking Forward To</strong><br />
<br />
The comet, I mean <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21701641">Pan-Starrs</a><br />
But I bet we don't see it. Those comets, they're elusive creatures, the only one that's been any good in my life time was Hale-Bop (sp?) in 1997, which we saw when we were in Poland for Easter. That was a cracker! &amp; what evil does the pair due to visit this year portend, I wonder. I suppose we've room for a few more.<br />
<br />
<br />
Keynote picture is a cheat, it's the bed of sweet violets by the bus stop outside the Downs Hotel, at the Rottingdean crossroad, and meant to represent International Women's Day colours, but it's just a stand in. Our own violets are too shy.  
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