Wednesday, December 28, 2005

From the Cumbernauld News

Brothers and Sisters (or rather both my readers) I got the following letter printed in the Cumbernauld News in relation to the "Demolition" program which featured Cumbernauld Town Centre.
 
 

Sir / Madam,

 

I read with interest your recent article on “Demolition” as well as watching the offending programme itself.

 

As with most people, I expect, it is disappointing to see the reaction from our elected representatives as well as the Director of Planning and Environment for North Lanarkshire Council. Clearly the people of Cumbernauld have made the views on the “space-station on stilts” very clear. It wouldn’t have won had we not.

 

If the elected representatives had contrasted Cumbernauld Town Centre, with that of Coatbridge, Airdrie or Motherwell (all within the NLC Local Authority) then perhaps they might understand. If the pile of rubble between the Town Centre and Cumbernauld College is our Councillors and Planners idea of committing to Cumbernauld and investing in it, I dread to think what would happen if they really were intent on ignoring us.

 

I think, however, that as Cumbernauld residents we have to take some responsibility for this ourselves. Neither Cathie Craigie or Rosemary McKenna voted themselves in, and the planners did not appoint themselves. If more pressure is forthcoming on this issue, then all the better. If the politicians won’t force their own hand, then as voters it is up to us. Perhaps, I might suggest, next time my brothers and sisters may reconsider their votes more carefully?

 

The suggestions which came from the program – i.e. a more authentic High Street and cutting down the number of lanes in Central Way, I can only applaud their suggestions, despite it coming from a “London Based TV company”. At least someone made a suggestion that didn’t involve dropping yet another large box around the Town Centre.

 

Yours truly,

 

Kenneth Sheerin,

[street removed]

Saturday, December 24, 2005

Flicker, a short story

Flicker, a short story by Kenneth Sheerin
Last Day on Mars Colony - The Diary of Jacob Strachan, Feb 14, 2215
I know this says February, but it’s not, there’s no point in gauging time until I reach Nectus 3. I don’t know how much of time matters when you go to the colonies. I can’t stop thinking about the money, even in comparison with the prices there... Jeez, I need to focus; it’s almost time to go.
I said my goodbyes to the ‘boarders over at Olympus this morning. Didn’t even wash. I wanted to compose a haiku when I kissed that Meg lassie again, but this time it was a peck. Not like last night.
This is the first chance I’ve had to write for a couple of days, because yesterday was the third day of the tests before being allowed to leave. I was bunked up tightly the whole night with the ‘Boarders from Olympus. They’re off to the Chasm on Eros to do god knows what; I barely understood their lingo. I guess, now, I'm not sure if they meant me to.
Back to the tests though, we were hunched and rigid for seven solid hours while the scans took place. The white coat said before we went in that they did us in packs to try to stimulate any transmission of disease so that they’d know. The deep scans would catch any long incubation and the physicals the quick ones. Either way they needed to check and if the UNEC Department of Transportation had cancelled my trip because I caught something from someone else. That would be tough - a harsh but fair borders control from a military mind I bet.
Meg, that maroon-haired ‘Boarder, the pretty Australian with the soft voice and the curious laugh… I guess she liked my jokes, or maybe she was as bored as I was by the end of the seven hours. Why and how we ended doing it with those guys in the same room, I dunno... It wasn’t as if it was Valentine’s Day.
Twelve hours and we were spat back to the white coats, fondled and forgotten as we walked out the door clean, apparently untainted. And for some us, slightly anxious (in a confused way) but relieved… Jeez! I never thought leaving would be like this!
This morning, like I said, I made for the bar they were talking about in the hole; which was crammed inside a staccato biosphere, a block south of Clinton Base. I went to wish them well… I kissed Meg. Think I should try to catch her in Eros, it’s in the same system as Nectus 3, so it should be easy enough).
Later on though, I discovered I needn’t have bothered, because the mission flight itinerary was for all of us. I sat intently and stiffly until I saw them lounging and laughing, not caring about what they heard and copied them.
This Marine came in dead on ten a.m., slammed his folder on the desk and barked at us in a bored mid-western drawl you rarely hear except in reality shows.
“Tense? ‘Should be. Gonna be making yourselves a target for every unknown piece of Shinto that this ride has to offer. We don’t know jack, nothing. There’s radiation out there, when you come out of the wormhole for your first stop that messes with your head. Try this...”
Immediately the place was immersed in a pure, vaguely neon, purple light, and I saw lights, felt immensely paranoid. Everything went black and I knew something malicious was in there with us. Meg was screaming; the guys were going mental. It was just chaos, and then with a click of his fingers everything was cool like the Fonz again.
“That’s a more refined version of Radiation we get on Earth. That same Shinto is responsible, partly, for Angel Experiences, Near Death Experiences, and Abduction Experience. It’s fake. Until you hit the ‘Station, you are traffic, nothing less. Just strap yourself in, enjoy the zombie ride and try not to panic. We won’t let you unlock yourselves during jumps. Like I said, shut up and enjoy the zombie ride. It’s all normal. You get used to the radiation eventually, you’ll see the staff wandering about during it, while you’re strapped there freaking out. Just sign the disclaimer and you get to go. And no, you don’t get to sue us afterwards.
“Okay, next: How long. For you? Say twelve hours all in, including wormholes. You know about time warps inside wormholes, right?”
We nodded. “Good, you need to be teaching at Harvard to understand that stuff.”
“Or Edinburgh,” I chipped in.
“We got a Jock on this one? Jeez. Yeah, whatever... Shut up and make like you care, okay?
“Right, yeah, so you’re in there for twelve hours, but that won’t be twelve hours here. I’m not going into it, you know this Shinto. So, two stops, once in an expanse (dead space, you can barely see any stars) and next in a Gas Giant system. It’s beautiful, but you’ll be too crazy to take photos at that point, so, don’t, okay?
“So that’s us, any questions?”
That was almost it, just the slow filing along the spaceport moving floor-ways until we got to our departure lounge. I started writing this, my last entry before the journey and had to stop half way up. This should be my summing up. However, it isn’t. It’s the weirdest part of all.
The ‘Boarders were generally messing around while; I was writing my journal. Of Course, they were trying to sound Scottish and get my attention. I would laugh it off and continue.
At some point Meg walked away for ten minutes with her handbag, so I thought, “Period.”
She came back with a Kabuki Mask on. Same clothes, usual routine, but it was as if nothing was different. Everything was the same. They messed around and no one mentioned the Kabuki Mask.
One by one, they all went off somewhere sight unseen, and all came back wearing the unspoken Kabuki Masks. One by one, all was sitting down, all normal, all talking… However, each one’s return precipitated the conversation to ebb slightly slower, somewhat quieter. Each word glinting less and becoming deeper, more abstract more intellectual conversation. Themes became much more heightened, from clothes, to style in general, to the eccentric styles of, say, Existentialists, and then onto philosophy in general. From that, the values and syllables in the words grew large, three-dimensional. The tonality was would change, ever so slightly with each mood and subject metamorphosis.
It was all done so gradually, so slightly that you would barely notice it. However, I was there for the ride, so I did. Now, these fun scamps I had laughed, and even loved (yeah, that sounded a bit Whitney Houston) with, had reformed as some kind of philosophical collective. It was hypnotising.
Charlie, the tall blond longhaired guy who I thought Meg’s real boyfriend was got up, walked to the can machine, bumped into some guy on the way there and got a can. He pffted it open and had a slug, then slipped Meg a small, square, purple piece of paper.
A wee while after Charlie had replaced his seat and was quietly and, apparently, innocently conversing with Meg, she got up, replaced the purple piece of paper inside her handbag, with a large A4 memo and folded it up tightly. She folded it lengthways first, so that it was a long rectangle, then itself and around until all that she had left was a tight triangle. I don’t even know if that’s significant. Jeez.
Finally, she strode over to the toilet again, with the triangle and came out again ten minutes later. Another stranger, this time a girl in a business suit entered the toilet; I saw the smallest piece of the triangle forced into a compartment of her shoulder bag as she’s exiting the toilet.
Concurrently with all this: and this is the part that freaked me out more than anything did:  Joe and Mike, (I never caught their real names, so had to make some up) as soon as the purple paper appeared blew up at each other. There was shoving, there was shouting, jostling and generally a lot of attention their way.
Meg and Charlie were, generally, much more subdued and would meld into the background throughout this, despite the actions I related previously.
Because, for the most part I was huddled over my old-school jotter, I was ignored
Between the suspicions, there was one key moment I clearly wasn’t supposed to see. I was at the Can machine myself, and through the reflection of mirrored poster saw the reflection of two subtle gestures from Charlie and Meg. Charlie bent forward, looked directly into Meg’s eyes, swivelled them in my direction and back to her. Meg then shrugged. The machine dispensed a can for me and I took my seat.
Silence and a post coital hush in the minutes remaining before the flight. The argument had been replaced by a distant hush and the occasional glance. Soon we boarded.
Now we leave, and I write these words as the spacecraft leaves Mars to be a distant spec. The metal spikes, which encase the wormhole, quiver as if they’re more industrial and mechanical than electronic. Some semblance of order was restored on proceedings when the swirling wormhole engulfed everything and the universe panicked at its incision. This is no mere convenience.
We descended into non-space and warp time as if we were spiders in the plughole, engulfed in more misunderstanding and panic than our technology and brain functions should allow, and emerged, four glorious hours later in the darkest place imaginable.

+++Switch to vocal media+++

The beast is static, satanic, reliable, dependable, quiet and eccentric flames. Why can I only focus on Meg? Why does one incident play out as theatre? I feel like there is a presence here, where I can’t move. I am as one with sleep, yet not truly part of it. I am the puppet, but feel outside the play, a voyeur… It is a strange, horrible, tenable and terrible desire… Desire… Desire…
My feelings are haunted and controlled… Why? Why does my brain burn so much?
My eyes c scade into the universe itself, as if  it is a rejection of the silent sleep, a meandering through the loneliness and isolation of wondering. I am j merely watching. Somehow the whole craft swivels it on itself and I remain without. Somehow, the past and present are future and I am left wondering, wandering outside this abyss…
Finally, inev tably, I can see one star… One last flicker in the universe. A flicker of a star doomed to become a black hole and draw its last brother in on zd itself. It is the c ntre of a massive dust cloud, so mundane and featureless, but transparent and longing for creation. It should be a recognisable shape, but that shall never be, for it is the last gasp of a dead universe. My dead universe.
The star fl ckers for a second and some of the dust burns, maybe… maybe if I was a scientist, I would know what it means. Maybe because I’m not I care… I don’t know. The st r is collapsing, energy pulsing and creating flares which soon create a hole in the mass of dust around it and the red dread dead melanc hly flickers and explodes. It’s all so brief… I’m so glad it’s in slo-mo because I couldn’t see it all otherwise. The black h le is more instant that I’d have cared to see and the falling of the dust into it is frighteningly swift. The swirl creates a dance and the dance creates a flicker of life until it is finally absorbed. Aysd.
The tr mors of gravity create life, however briefly. The increase in gravity will fuel th  dust, and in particular it’s components I assume, to burn in the r  own gravity for a second and create a light that would be as brig t as the star itself. The pre sure will turn the amino acids of nkyjb life into a man, for s ch a brief second as to be inconsiste t with the universe’s own hla history… an uncompr mising addition to the end of life. But this flicker will reveal, as the merest glint, a mechanical satellite. One last flicker of a dead civilisation.
Some ne’s he rt had ye rned to und rstand, but s dly too late to bec me a form, en ry or light with the beyond they had expl red. Cl arly they rfhad hop d for some Saulian mn revel tion in D mascus, or t eir metaphor cal eq ival nt, to qlpz dr ve them on to imm rtality. Ygdea.
D jmkfdj gfjgfj rjre jurjrnjrji uytrf
But uej bkifr  vision njksenukfe cease and I nhlmnseni continue my journey.
Ns sel aew e nae  fojiepiof pae through the wormhole
…flicker…
+++transmission deteriorates beyond recognition+++

Friday, December 23, 2005

C.G Poem (partial)

She dances in a ring of fire
my Vietnam
my broken record
my obsession, my obsession

Many Believe Brit state cover up over death of Tosh

From: xxxxxxx
Sent: Friday, December 23, 2005 9:26 PM
Subject: Many Believe British State Cover-up over death of Tosh

No action over parliament alert
 
The Queen enters the parliament before making her address
The Queen performed the opening ceremony last year
The Crown has dropped proceedings against a man arrested during a security scare on the day the Queen opened the Scottish Parliament.
 
Alan McIntosh had originally faced firearms and explosives charges.
He appeared in court in October last year, only hours after his brother Andrew hanged himself in Craiginches Prison in Aberdeen.
 
The pair were arrested near Edinburgh on the day Scotland's new parliament was officially opened.
Andrew McIntosh
Andrew McIntosh hanged himself in jail
Andrew McIntosh, 49, was a convicted terrorist, the mastermind behind a series of letter bombs linked to the Scottish National Liberation Army.
 
His brother Alan, 51, was released on bail last October after his appearance at Aberdeen Sheriff Court.
On Friday the Crown Office said Crown counsel had instructed that no proceedings would take place. No reason was given for the decision.
 
A third man, Graeme Otterson, was also arrested last October.
The 33-year-old, known as MacOtter, was later released from custody after proceedings against him were dropped.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

dotSCO Letters to MSPs

So, basically, I thought I should do something contructive for a change. This was mildly pre-empted by having a rather large dig at a certain member of Independence First for spending more time slagging people off than actually doing anything... Anyway, to what I've done.

I read the dotSCO website, and had a browse around the Catalonian success and decided, hmm... Then I read that the Berliners wanted their own Top Level Domain (TLD) as well.

Five letters are currently waiting on being posted tomorrow and are going to Carolyn Leckie (SSP), Michael Matheson (SNP), Cathie Craigie (Labour), Margaret Mitchell (Conservative - yes, I actually wrote to a Tory. Stop throwing things...) and Donald Gorrie (Liberal Democrat).

This is what I wrote:

123 Notmy Address Street

Somewhere in...

Cumbernauld

G67 xXx


19 December 2005

[elected members name], MSP

The Scottish Parliament

Edinburgh

EH99 1SP

Dear [goes here],

Subject: DotSCO Domain Name

I write with reference to a recent campaign for a Scottish Domain Name on the Internet. Known as “dotSCO - http://www.dotsco.org” I believe it to be a benefit to Scottish Culture and Society.

I’d like to bring it to your attention, because while the voices of the people are important: having Scottish Parliament support for this measure - which I believe it is clear that the Scottish People want - is vital in influencing international agencies like Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN).

We have the same arguments to make as the People of Catalonia who successfully established a *.cat (dot cat) Top Level Domain (via the punyCAT campaign); we have the same arguments as the people of Berlin (http://www.dotberlin.de/english/). That is, that this is an important opportunity for Scotland Individuals, Businesses and Culture to place itself amongst the heartland of the world rather than shirk away from it.

I hope that you’ll support this project, either by raising questions in Parliament and / or by supporting the campaigns already in place to gain Scotland a TLD (top-level domain).

I have been an internet user for years now, and have never felt that the TLD .co.uk (dot co dot uk) has fully represented Scottish Culture. I hope that you will support this campaign.

Best regards,

Kenneth Sheerin

Fw: Joke

A precious little girl walks into a pet shop and asks, "Excuthe me, do you have any widdle wabbits?"

The shopkeeper's heart melts, he gets down on his knees so that he's on her level, and says, "Do you want a widdle white wabbit or a thoft, fuffy Bwack wabbit, or one like that widdle bwown wabbit over there?"

The little girl blushes, rocks on her heels, puts her hands on her knees, leans forward and whispers ... " I don't weally fink my pet pyfon gives a phuk."

Thursday, December 15, 2005

The Pointless Trivilialities of Life

Comrades, how are we today?

I redesigned the page a wee bit and got rid of my photie and used my own personal ensign, the Rampant Fox (a celtic tribal design I've used since I was a kid based on the first short story I ever wrote). I started feeling uncomfortable looking at my own face every time I went onto here.

Anyway, to neurocam stuff. I'm still an entry level newbie, and have been lurking around the Neuroboards. Seems interesting enough, but I came to a point where I realised I had nothing to say to them. The people that post the most seem to have been in Neurocam since it started and others are bitter and rejected. Nice, but I think I'll watch from the sidelines on that one.

Anyway, I was curious about the disclaimer on the Neurocam webpage and asked the enquiries guy, Maxwell Knight about it. (See below). It won't tell you much, but hey, don't say Mr. Kenny doesn't update you on the pointless trivialities of his life.

Dear Operative ,

Thank you for a very interesting enquiry!

However, I can assure you that the official Neurocam disclaimer is not
organized in any certain way.

Regards,

Maxwell Knight
Director of Human Resources & Security
Neurocam International
maxwell.knight@neurocam.com


> Maxwell,
>
> good evening, I am recently recruited Entry Level Operative, and Harriet
> Moore directed me towards yourself if I had any queries.
>
> This may seem like an odd query, but it's in relation to the "disclaimer"
> page on the Neurocam website, and I found myself curious as to it's
> organisation (or lack thereof). .
>
> Are the disclaimers "Neurocam is not a product..." etcetera organisated in
> any format? I.e. Is it organised chronologically; in an order that new
> operatives answer the question "5. Complete this sentence - "Neurocam
> is."" from the Neurocam Questionaire; or in any other kind of organisation
> or none?
>
> Operative

Today I was in Falkirk, fair, but slightly grubby, town where William Wallace received his most serious lamping at the hands of the English. I was at an IRRV Seminar about dealing with difficult customers.

The only really interesting thing is in realtion to the "Institute of Rates, Revenues and Valuation". This is a Local Authority based organisation which trains staff in qualificiations to do with Local Government Finance (don't switch off, this isn't nearly as dull as it may seem). Consequently, some local authorities have been swithering in the past as to whether to make some grades in the various councils unobtainable without an IRRV qualificiation. It's not in the pipeline, but it's been mentioned before. The significant part is that there are higher levels where being a member is virtually mandatory in most local authorities.

How many employees does the IRRV have in Scotland? One. The others are in London.

You see my point? It's all about control.

Haven't got much else to say tonight, peace - out...

Sunday, December 11, 2005

The 1820 Rising

I post this as I was researching the 1820 Rising on the internet and came across a letter from Thomas McCulloch, one of the transported, and decided to post it.

Read this and weep. He sacrificed everything for his country and ended up a slave.

And most of you bastards won't even vote.

I've read this before, but it reminded me WHY I researched my history. I'm from Condorrat, I know our history. It just makes me angry, so angry that I feel enraged that my brothers and sisters act like simpletons when our forefathers fought so hard to get us further and better and we, as a society, repay them by destroying ourselves.

To you who don't care: A plague on all your houses.

Kenny.

The 1820 Rising: "The 1820 Rising
The Radical War
Letter from Thomas McCulloch to his wife 12th October 1821
Sydney,
New South Wales,
October 12, 1821,

My Dear Wife,

I send you those few lines, hoping they will find you and the children in good health, as they leave me at present thank God for it. We arrived here. on the 18th of May, all in good health, (after being at sea five months; I was taken off the stores by a Mr. Panton (Paton ?) a native of Scotland, and employed by him as a labourer; but not agreeing with me, he was so kind as to transfer me to a Captain Irvin, and I am to be with him as a house-servant, and I am going to remove about 40 miles up the country.

If you think of coming here, there shall be nothing wanting on my part to bring you, as I have every encouragement from several Gentlemen that can enable me to do so, as your presence here will free me from bondage; as any man’s wife that comes out here as a free settler, can take her husband from Government employment or being a servant to any man. Captain Irvin has promised to do every thing for us to make us comfortable. By our friends applying to the Secretary of State at London, you could obtain for us 300 or 400 acres of land. It is Andrew Dawson’s wish that his wife would come here also, and we will endeavour to get you out both together; but if you do not think of coming, I hope that you and the rest of my friends will do all they can to obtain a mitigation of my sentence, as my mind never can be at rest till I be with you and the rest of the family.

Sir Thomas Brisbane arrived here two days ago; he is to be our new Governor and the Governor can pardon any man he thinks proper; a great many have obtained their liberty since we arrived here; Captain Irvin. Mr Wyeems, Commissary-General, and other Gentlemen, have promised to befriend us; and the whole of our party is much respected here by the most respectable people in this country, and if you will only come out, a steady man and women can do very well, as they are very rare articles to be found here.

Andrew Dawson, James Cleland, John McMillan, and Allan Murchie, are kept in Government employment, on account of their being blacksmiths, who are very valuable in this part of the world; W. Clarkson and John Anderson is with Mr Lord, a respectable Gentleman, who much esteems them. Alex. Johnson is principal servant to the Commissary-General; Thomas McFarlane and Thomas Pink are with the Barrack Master; James Wright is shopman to a Dr. Phillips; Benjamin Moir, John Barr, and David Thomson is with Sir John Jameson: Andrew White, Bookbinder and Alex Hart, cabinet-maker, are in Paramatta with Dr Douglas; Wm. Smith is also at Paramatta with Mr. Marsden; Robt. Gray and Alex. Lattimer, is in Van Dieinans Land with Mr Mulgrave.

This is a fine country. and will grow any thing that will grow in any other country, and in, general have three crops a year. Loaf bread 3d. per lb., butter 2s per lb., beef and mutton 10d, eggs 2s a dozen, tea 2s. 6d. per lb. sugar 6d, potatoes 10s per cwt. A free labourer gets from 25s to 30s a-week, and a tradesman who has a trade to suit this country the country can make it a great deal better. I see Gilbert McLeod, (late Printer of the 'Spirit of the Union') often, he is very well, and is acting as a schoolmaster.

Yrs. etc
Thomas
McCulloch"

Flicker

Apparently my blog is worth this much...


My blog is worth $2,258.16.
How much is your blog worth?

Saturday, December 10, 2005

Rob Roy Commemoration

Rob Roy event

Rob Roy MacGregor Commemoration

Na Fir Dileas are hosting a celebration of the life and times of Rob Roy Macgregor

Thursday 29th December 2005

Kings House Hotel

Balquhidder

1:00pm march

Graveside service

Meal at 5:30pm

Entertainment Traditional Celtic Rock singer Cal and the awesome sound of Albannach (former members of Clann an Drumma)

Tickets £20 (full day)

Evening tickets £8

For tickets contact Colin tel. 07812 905073
or Carol te. 01259 219945

A wee taster of Albannach .....
http://www.royalhouseofstewart.org.uk/video/albannach.wmv

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Playlist Cumbernauld

Brothers and Sisters,

I thought that tonight I’d share with you the playlist that will keep you cool for the next week:

  1. Bonnie Dundee – The Corries

  2. Foggy Dew – The Wolftones

  3. Loch Lomond – Runrig

  4. Killiecrankie – The Corries

  5. Banna Strand – The Wolftones

  6. Ride On – Christy Moore

  7. Rock on Rockall – The Wolftones

  8. Boys of the old Brigade – The Wolftones

  9. Flower of Scotland – The Corries

  10. Scots Wha Hae – The Corries

  11. Ye Jacobites by Name – The Corries

  12. The Shamrock and the Thistle – The Corries and the Pogues

  13. Irish Rover – The Pogues and the Dubliners  

  14. Loch Lomond – The Corries

Disorder… Disorient… Destroy…

Monday, December 05, 2005

Fw: St Andrew's Day Petition

 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: beth
Sent: Monday, December 05, 2005 3:59 PM
Subject: St Andrew's Day Petition

Dear all 

 Thank you for supporting the St Andrews Day petition to Parliament on the teaching of Scottish literature, history and languages. By the day we had 1,500 supporters and the initiative received wide publicity.

Next Step

Equally importantly I am advised that we have a very good chance of moving the issue from a petition to formal investigation by Parliament. This begins with a hearing by the Petitions Committee on the morning of Wednesday 18th January 2006. The meeting begins at 10.00am and is open to the public (advanced booking advised).

What you can do

In the meantime an edited version of the wording has gone on to the Scottish Parliament's web-site www.scottish.parliament.uk (there is a link from the Home Page to E-petitions). Go to "Petition by Dr Donald Smith, on behalf of the Literature Forum for Scotland, calling for the Scottish Parliament to urge the Scottish Executive to urgently review the study of Scottish history, literature and languages at primary, secondary and tertiary levels, to ensure that all citizens of Scotland have the opportunity to understand these key aspects of their own society and culture." 

As an individual you can re-iterate your support by registering your name and address and encouraging others to do so up to 11th January 2006.

We are doing a master list of those who have expressed support so far as a paper submission but that does not exclude you from directly registering on this next Parliamentary phase which reflects concern on the part of the general public. You can also participate in a discussion forum on the site.

As an organisation or in an official capacity you can also write directly to Dr Jim Johnston, Clerk, Public Petitions Committee, The Scottish Parliament, Edinburgh EH99 1SP

These letters are reported to the Committee as a further indication of support. His Email is james.johnston@scottish.parliament.uk

Strategy

My plea is that we maintain a sustained campaign through the parliamentary process rather than let the issue subside. That is the only way to actually achieve official change. It also has the benefit of engaging the Scottish public.

With thanks

Dr Donald Smith, Chair

The Literature Forum for Scotland


Sunday, December 04, 2005

Condorrat Radical Memorial

An interesting idea has been brought to my attention, have a swatch and I’ll write some more after you’ve read it.

----- Original Message -----
From: Max Von Denizen
To: Kenny Sheerin
Sent: Sunday, December 04, 2005 14:29 PM
Subject: Blog

I thought it was a particularly weak post today, Kenny. Couldn’t you be bothered?

Anyway, to other news. I’ve had an interesting idea. You remember how I had an accident with that Union Jack. Well, I was thinking, it was all rather meaningless in the general scheme of things. Fun, but it didn’t really make much of a point, did it?

Basically, YOU organise a memorial to the Condorrat Radicals. Think of it as a way of doing something positive for both your readers.

Condorrat has a genuine Radical Tradition of participating in the 1820 Rising as well as contributing to the United Scotsmen (through, as we’ve discussed, Radical Transportee Thomas McFarlane who eventually returned to Condorrat after being cast adrift to Australia). Since this hasn’t been commemorated, even by the 1820 Society (which isn’t understandable, most are so old their bus passes should be able to get them here for free).

But, we get away from that business with wreathes and speeches and try to get something more participatory so that it doesn’t matter how small the memorial is.

Format for the Condorrat Radicals Memorial Rally

Attendance: Either by Invite or by them asking.(not openly plugged).
Location: (see above)
Time: (see above)

Format:
Introduction – maybe a couple of speakers
Oath Ceremony – those in attendance take the United Scotsmen Oath in turn on a Saltire, preferably with a symbolic item of some kind, like a Wallace Sword or something representative.
Flag Burning – we burn a Union Jack and EXPLAIN that it is a symbol of our oppression
Closing words over the burning remnants of the flag.

Consequently, as I’m sure even you have realised, it’s not the kind of thing one can plug like the Glencoe Rally or Bannockburn. Indeed, quite the opposite, only those with the genuine heart and conviction would WANT to come and therefore will no doubt ask you. The onus, obviously on them to e-mail you. I’d much rather they didn’t e-mail me; it’s so hard to distinguish Spam from decent e-mails.

And, obviously, it can’t be fully public because obviously the moment you ask the council: Please can I ceremonially burn a Union Jack Mr. WhiteSettler Council Employee / Police Chief Constable? The moment you finish asking you’ll be rubbing Vaseline in your nether regions pleading with some homophobic junkie not to ass-rape you.

Hit me back with your usual promptness,

Blah blah,

Max

It’s an intriguing idea. If you’re interest, see me at the usual e-mail address. Otherwise, it’s invite only.



To Kill a Dead Man

Yesterday I went along (I say went... I mean trapsed through Pollockshaws with a Red Duster Flag - see the right sidebar for a .gif of the flag) to the March and Rally for John Maclean. As usual it was a rainy, musty Glasgow morning where the sound of our drums bounced off the tower blocks and back us all the way until we reached John Maclean's Cairn.

The speeches were good, including Colin Fox, who (if I must say) should really try and speak louder. Yes, it's a petty point, but I doubt anyone at the back could've heard him. Also in attendance were Jim Fairlie of the Free Scotland Party, Gerry Cairns of the SRSM, Lloyd Quinan (previously of the Scottish Parliament and an STV weathermap) and a hellfire and brimstone anti-nuclear campaigner called Brian Quail.

Most of the speeches revolved around anti-war protests in Maclean's time and in ours and how we can justify poverty on the scale we marched past on the way up to the cairn and spending billions on George Dubya's pretence that he's the Cowboy Prez cos he can shoot more towel-heads than his daddy could.

Frankly, it makes me sick that we can prioritise our civic finance in this manner. I believe we sort out our own communities FIRST and worry about other countries later. Of course, politic points mean nothing anymore. It can't have escaped your notice that Max's slightly dodgy direct action has gotten more hits to this blog than my political points? I guess actions DO speak louder than words. Fortunately for you, then, Max has borrowed my Camera so I guess he's up to something.

After the Rally was the post match social, which because I hadn't eaten anything during the day previously meant I was inebriated quicker than I would've liked. Didn't get any photos during the rally cos I was carrying a flag and not afterwards because I... well, I'm not sure why.

There's two events upcoming I can think of, one is a commemoration for Rob Roy on Dec 29, the other is the Glencoe Rally on Feb 12. I was kind of wanting to make the Rob Roy one, but since no-one I know is going, I doubt I'll make it. I'll make Glencoe easily enough.


Revelations