Dan Everard.

  • Store
  • Galleries
    • Travel
    • Landscape
    • Street
  • About
  • John Pilger – The War on Democracy

    May 27th, 2008

    A special screening and Q&A session with John Pilger at the Clapham Picturehouse cinema.

    • http://www.johnpilger.com

    The War on Democracy was very thought provoking. Pilger covered huge political events from the past century in Latin America, where the USA has pursued it’s usual selfish goals at the expense of others.

    During the questions and answers session somebody asked “what can we do to help?” To which J.P. had no truly satisfactory answer, instead gently hinting that once you kow enough about the situation to help, the how should become clear.

    Lucy and I entered into a long discussion (over steak and chips), about how we could help. Lucy confessed to being inspired to pursue a Masters in South American history, an idea of hers from her Atlantic College days. I challenged this idea, playing my usual devils advocate, by suggesting that the completion of a Masters might not leave Lucy feeling any more empowered to help.

    My recently sparked passion for local scale initiatives as a force for wider scale change – see topic green living for examples – led me to suggest that the real answer is at home. My argument was that greed and a desire for security (energy, food, etc.) is driven by the lack of these securities on a local scale. If I were able to fend for myself, it is likely that the burden of responsibility I heave upon the shoulders of the country’s leader would be significantly reduced. Thus it is the responsibility of each of us to become self sufficient and find a way of developing a sociable marketplace for goods and services which focuses on the now and not on our individual, and hence selfish, future interests.

    Future interests to me suggests monetary interests. In a simple example, an individual with a surplus of beans could give them to a needy neighbour, and probably would if he couldn’t sell them to a needy neighbour. It is this concept which distills the meaning of the previous paragraph. Local scale economies have no need for complex and often unfair trade mechanisms, instead requiring simple local currencies, if any monetary markets at all.

    I think any movement away from our reliance on global markets is positive in both an economical and political sense. As such I will be doing all I can to move towards local sustainability. I’ll plant my own crops, buy from local sources, build instead of buying at all, and investigate renewable and local energy sources. The idea of a local currency has even been considered in my area (Brixton). You’ll find mention of it here – http://www.transitiontownbrixton.org.

  • Frankie

    November 29th, 2007

    Lucy and I have bought a cat! Yep. His name is Frankie, and he’s a jet black moggy. Some heartless people in Frankie’s past left him without home or love, and he turned up at the ‘Battersea Dogs and Cats Home’ where the right kind of people helped him find a home. With us! Frankie is a bit nuts, and we’ve attributed this to his past, where no doubt he took fox attacks in his stride as he broke feline hearts in every town. He’s quite the explorer, and is struggling to deal with the indoor lifestyle we’re forcing upon him for these first few weeks – he needs to get to know the place before we let him outside… He’s already escaped once, through an open window, and now will not stop moaning about how much he wants to get some fresh air. I’ll be uploading some photos soon so you can all get to know Mr Frank.

  • New hardware – eeepc

    November 25th, 2007

    I write sated, after another successful Sunday roast. Itunes is making it’s way through a playlist of Christmas classics, and I feel rather at peace with the world. It has been so long since I have thought to write on this site, and now I have my new ultra mobile laptop, it just seems like the right time! The laptop, by the way, is an Asus Eee PC. An Intel Mobile Celeron 900MHz processor chugs along, under-clocked to 600MHz for the battery’s sake. 512MB RAM is plenty for the day to day tasks, and I was impressed to discover that this could be upgraded to 2GB in time (sacrificing the warranty – Asus clearly want very little by way of support hassle!)

    The tiny beast sports a 7 inch LCD, which is surprising usable, an uncomfortable (but what do you expect) keyboard, and a fully featured mouse pad with both vertical and horizontal scroll. All are less comfortable to use than their full size brethren, but for a laptop small enough to fit in the pocket of my baggy jeans, I’ll settle for a bit of discomfort. Oh, I nearly forgot – it was only £200. Everyone should own one, there’s no excuse not to. Yeah, it’s Linux not Windows, and no you can’t play Crysis, and no it doesn’t have an optical drive, but it’s rugged (no hard drive, just 4GB SSD), cheap, and gets almost every job you could want to do on the move done.

    New Music

    With my inner geek now under control (I promise), I should mention my latest musical discovery. The Portico Quartet are a wonderful new jazz group whose debut CD, Knee Deep in the North Sea, is as original as it is melodic. The group comprises four accomplished young musicians, and together they have fashioned a hybrid sound – ‘Knee Deep…’ bridges the gap in my collection between the chill of Zero 7, Groove Armarda et al, and my jazz favourites.

    The guys are all local to me in Brixton, and I found them performing an intimate coffee-house gig at the Ritzy Cafe. It was the perfect place to experience their sound first hand, and particularly to have my first introduction with the hang – a flying saucer-like steel drum used to great effect on all of the band’s compositions.

    The highlight of both the night’s performance and the band’s CD is the album’s title track, which demonstrates perfectly the haunting, mellow backdrop the hang contributes to the soundscape. There was no danger of stolen thunder however – the saxophone and drums were both well played (even if the sax seemed a little rehearsed), and the star of the show for me was the bassist, who manipulated his instrument with the ease and skill one might expect of a seasoned performer, and who was responsible for drawing the other instrumentation together to yield a far tighter performance than we might otherwise have experienced.

  • Furious

    April 15th, 2007

    The moment we’ve all been waiting for?

    It seems to be official – there will be a fourth Fast and Furious movie! A little backstory… Any of you who know me will know how much I love the first in this (lately disappointing) series of films, not in a small part due to the part played by Vin Diesel and his ‘team’. The writer of the last FaF film, Chris Morgan, has apparently been given the go ahead to work on the script for the next in the series (big deal…), but far more importantly, rumours are circulating that the film might carry on where the first left off, bringing Dom Torreto and his crew back into the frame. Yes! Is it…? I think so… It can’t be. I hope it is… The moment we’ve all been waiting for!

    A note to those of you who don’t know me. Please do not judge me based only upon the above excited paragraph…

  • An Update!

    April 10th, 2007

    Yes, I’m aware a blog should be updated more regularly than this. Last night the family (Mum, Amy, Georgie and myself) spent the afternoon and evening in London. Very enjoyable indeed! We started in the shadow of the London eye, eating some tasty sandwiches (thanks Amy) and people watching. As usual, Southbank was playing host to an array of street performers, free-runners, breakdancers and tourists, so plenty of food for observation. Then off to the book stalls, where Amy picked up a bargain, and Georgie reflected on her relationship with reading (disfunctional is an understatement). The air seemed to have cleared from a slightly unnecessary barney in the car (sorry Mum), and in good spirits we headed off to the Tate Modern for a little look around. Loved the slide installation and Carsten Höller’s sliding doors in the new aquisitions exhibition. Gourmet Burger Kitchen did the dinner honours, and the ongoing 2006 production of Evita at the Adelphi Theatre was wonderful.

  • Cafe Gena

    October 12th, 2006

    Cafe GenaLucy and I were sitting outside a little corner cafe (Cafe Gena, pictured right) in the eastern backstreets of Florence, Italy on 6th August. Elated at our purchase of a day-old copy of The Guardian, we were both eager to digest as much news as the flimsy international edition could feed us. Typical then, that we should settle upon a small news item on the front page to debate for hours upon end, leaving little time in the day of two busy tourists for all that news.

    Katie Allen’s article of 5th August 2006 announced the intentions of the Trade Union Congress (TUC) to publish details of boardroom salaries and bonuses on a new website, allowing employees to compare their below-inflation pay rises to some of the 25%-plus salary hikes experienced by their bosses. Lucy sparked our lunchtime conversation by asking how one could possibly justify the expansive difference between boardroom salaries, and the salary suffered by the bottom rung employees. Never one to shrink from such a challenge, I suggested the responsibilities of a manager were so much heavier than those placed upon the shoulders of the average employee, and the influence she could have on the fortunes of the company though poor performance so much more significant. Poor management can lead a store into the ground within weeks, but a poor till clerk is replaced without any real impact upon the branch performance.

    (more…)

←Previous Page
1 … 9 10 11
 

Loading Comments...