1. This is my Scottish Papa, Joseph Nicol Bell - 2nd from the right in the back row. He lied about his age to sign up to fight in WW1. He was injured in the Somme.
2. He was a Labour man all his life, and worked as a forester after the war. He was in the Home Guard during WW2.
3. He and my Nana lived in a council house all their lives (although in the 80s my Mum and Dad, who by then had done quite well in life, bought it for them so the last decade of their lives they had no rent to pay) (That's my Mum, middle left).
4. In the 80s Nana and Papa rented their telly from Radiorentals. We were up there for summer holidays, and their telly was on the blink.
5. My dad said "Don't worry. I'm going through the town. I will pop in and tell them."
Papa refused to let him. He said if they complained about the telly, Radiorentals might take it off them...
That is #DowntonAbbeySyndrome.
6. I've called it #DowntonAbbeySyndrome because my grandparents and parents were strong royalists who Knew Their Place. Even though my Dad did well in life, they knew what their position was in the pecking order. Class myths constantly reinforced by media-forced deference.
7. We are taught to bow and scrape to our betters from an early age. We are taught to "know our place" from birth. We might work hard to succeed, but we will never be part of that elite stratum of society that governs us. That is the biggest con trick every played.
8. Reject #DowntonAbbeySyndrome.
Call it out when you see it.
Boycott costume dramas and class propaganda that the media force-feeds us.
Know that you have agency, you have rights, and you just as entitled as the Bullingdon Boys to rule this country.
Disrupt the status quo.
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Keir Starmer was DPP between 2008 and 2013.
Some of these spy cops are likely to have infiltrated protest and opposition movements during that period.
No wonder he wanted to abstain on the Spy Cops bill.
Congratulations to @fruitbatmania
Don't support her persecutors!
1. At the time of the #ChickenCoup, on the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne in an area of Liverpool known for one or two rough pubs, a window was smashed at the side of a building that just so happened to have Angela Eagle's constituency office at the back of it.
2. I'm sure you all remember the claims that a brick (it wasn't) had been thrown through her window (it wasn't) by Corbyn supporters to threaten Eagle. In fact, the police later confirmed it was a bit of masonry, but never found out who did it.
3. Then there was the "cancelled meeting in Luton" due to the "hotel receiving threats". Except there was no evidence of any threats being made. The reason given by the hotel was that they became aware of the nature of the meeting (maybe they were Tory supporters)
1. People often think that Buddhists should be nice. It is a myth perpetrated by a West that has no understanding of Buddhism.
Thing is, sometimes being "nice" is not compassionate.
It is not "nice" to blithely sit by and let a govt. destroy a country and its people.
2. It is not "nice" to see suffering all around you and sit in your corner, gazing at your naval and wishing for a better world.
It is not "nice" to be silent and calm when the world around you is crying out for help.
3. I will always strive to be compassionate. That might mean that I am not "nice". And compassion means that I must fight this evil goverment, and the structure that underpins it, with every fibre in my being. #NotNice
1. Many years ago I was invited by the Graun to Graun Towers for a round table discussion on racism. I had been "spotted" as someone on their Comments pages who posted a lot about it, and it was felt that my input might be valuable. So off I trotted, middle-class white me.
2. During the course of the discussion, a Black woman was talking about how racism on social media was harming her, and middle-class white me said "well, can't you just log out?" I was a bit shook by her response.
3. She said words to the effect of "It's OK for you. You can argue all day if you want, then turn off and do something else. I can't turn off being Black and the target of racist abuse.
1. A word about threats of libel, from someone who has been through the mill. If you have a lawyer who is prepared to work on a no-win-no-fee basis, an insurance company who is prepared to back them, you will almost always win against an ordinary person on twitter.
2. When I say "win", I mean you will be able to force a grovelling apology out of them with a metaphorical gun held to their head - in all likelihood drafted by your own lawyer - because the costs of defending a libel suit are excruciating, and beyond most people's means.
3. It is only because I am a Buddhist who literally had no fear of losing all my worldly goods, and by the grace of hundreds of people making donations, that I was able to succeed in defending against a spurious claim against me. Not everyone can do that.
1/ I just remembered something really odd.
In the run-up to the Iraq invasion, me and a bunch of friends did a little protest in our little town, holding up a banner saying "Choose Peace". A young woman pulled up at the side of the road and started shouting at us.
2/ She was really upset because her brother was in the armed forces and was likely to be deployed. And she was angry at us for protesting against it. We tried our best to explain that the reason we were protesting was because we didn't want him to have to go.
3/ The cognitive dissonance was extraordinary. She wasn't able to compute the fact that the govt. was sending her brother away to a country where his life would be at risk, and preferred to scream at the people trying to stop it happening.