A place for my thoughts.

This place will mostly have my ideas and thoughts about the social world, politics, economics and philosophy. Mostly I will use it as somewhere to think publicly and help me better understand my ideas and opinions.

I like the concept of digital gardens, somewhere for thoughts and ideas to be curated, moving away from traditional blog style chronological posts. If you want to know more about the concept, head over to my about page. I have a list of curated links from various places around the internet, interesting articles, blogs or whatever.

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Supermajority Spin

Thanks to the absolute train-wreck of a campaign from the Tories, they are slowly coming around to the idea that people do not want to vote for them. CCHQ has taken stock and realised that almost certain defeat is coming their way and so have decided to go on the defensive. Instead of letting voters know the virtues of their—admittedly scant—policies, they are instead trying to scare voters with the prospect of a Labour ‘supermajority’....

June 21, 2024 · 4 min · 663 words

Essays » 

Reforming the housing market

I am firmly of the belief that housing is a human right and something that is essential for a happy and healthy life. States should do their best to ensure secure, safe, and affordable housing for their citizens. Unfortunately, the neoliberal shift in the late 20th century has left us in a situation where housing is unaffordable for so many, regardless of whether they are renting or buying. The explosion in private landlords and the normalisation of housing as an investment has ratcheted house prices over recent decades; for most this has seen their assets increase in value, but we are reaching a precipice now where younger generations are unable to get in on the market....

June 10, 2024 · 18 min · 3743 words

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Campus Protests

The anti-genocide The fact that such a thing as an anti-genocide protest exists is a horrifying prospect. That should be a default position. There is never a justification for genocide. protests that have swept through US universities in recent months have perfectly encapsulated the weakness in the position of the US establishment. Students at various campuses decided to target their protests by highlighting the investments their universities hold in Israeli companies....

May 16, 2024 · 3 min · 506 words

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The UK's council funding crisis

The way in which UK council funding problems are reported in the media is helpful only in obfuscating the source of the problems. As with most things political in the UK, the issue descends to tribal mudslinging with the media outlets ensuring to name the controlling political party in question in the headline, or first paragraph of their piece. In doing this, it frames the problem as purely party political and for many people the solution boils down to just choosing another party at the next election....

May 7, 2024 · 8 min · 1629 words

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Fuel Duty

For the 14th year in a row, the government continued with their freeze in the inflation-linked fuel duty rise. This policy was originally set out by Norman Lamont External Link in 1993 before being reintroduced by Alastair Darling External Link in 2009 following a brief hiatus in the early 2000s. The Tories’ decision to freeze fuel duty is a short-termist tactic and nothing more than electioneering, giving the government an easy boost in headlines at budget time....

April 17, 2024 · 2 min · 371 words

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The myth of green growth

At a time where the realities of the climate crisis are becoming more and more obvious and with ever more dire warnings being published by the IPCC, something needs to be done to ensure the lasting survival of our planet. We live in an aspirational society with the vast majority of us in large towns and cities which amplifies the influence of crowds and advertising where the difference between your current life and happiness is just a spend away....

April 9, 2024 · 3 min · 435 words

Essays » 

Is Violence the Answer?

I recently had an interesting conversation with a colleague at work. We were discussing the toppling of the statue of slave trader Edward Colston in Bristol in 2020 and the circumstances surrounding it. My colleague was sympathetic to the overall aims of the protestors, but believes that politics should be non-violent, and that by crossing the line from a peaceful protest, the protestors muddied and delegitimised their own aims. This view of politics is, in my mind, prohibitively restrictive and narrow....

November 5, 2023 · 6 min · 1176 words

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By Election Woes

Doing what he does best and avoiding his responsibilities, Rishi Sunak managed to be busy on the day of a double by-election contesting two Tory safe seats yesterday. Perhaps he saw the writing on the wall, but the reality is still a shock. Labour managed to achieve the single greatest turnover of a majority in a by-election since 1945 in Mid Bedfordshire, previously held by Nadine ‘Dosser’ Dorries, while in Tamworth a similarly impressive 20,000 vote majority was overturned....

October 20, 2023 · 5 min · 903 words

Essays » 

The UK's delivery problem

I recently saw a comment on an article about the UK’s tax loopholes; it said that tax reform is a dull subject for the electorate and boring for governments to implement, hence why it won’t be dealt with any time soon. This kind of view is symptomatic of a host of the political issues limiting the country, and one that we’ve been dealing with for decades. The neoliberal shift that began in 1979 has given us a political situation whereby the electorate are promised a better life so long as the economy grows - a chicken and egg type situation, if you will....

October 18, 2023 · 8 min · 1505 words