Zzzzzzzzz watch

Huhne

Lib Dem leadership frontrunner Chris Huhne has declared and gone and got himself a promotional website – chris2win – already! These web designers don’t half work quick these days don’t they?

No word as yet on whether Bristol West’s Stephen Williams will be Huhne’s campaign manager as he was last time ’round in 2006 though.

Elsewhere John Harris points out in The Guardian that both Huhne and his main rival Nick Clegg both went to the same private school, Westminster and both attended Oxbridge colleges. As Harris says:

So, there it is: two privately educated middle-aged white fellas with amazingly similar views squaring up for the leadership of the party that’s meant to think the unthinkable and stand that bit further outside the establishment. What is going on?

It’s called “a meritocracy” John.

PS. Adding to this gentlemanly collegiate atmosphere at the top of the Lib Dems, Northavon’s Steve Webb, another potential leadership contender according to the local Tories and Points West anyway, also went to Oxford. Hurrah!

Posted in Lib Dems, Politics | Tagged , , | There are 3 comments

If you won't tolerate this . . .

The Downs

With a crisis meeting of the Avon Fire & Rescue Authority, called by maverick Avonmouth Tory Spud Murphy, due to take place on Friday about the notorious “gay fire fighter incident” on The Downs, the silence on the liberal-left of the city is becoming deafening.

With the exception of Lib Dem councillor, Tim Kent, who sits on the authority and has made a dutiful, timid and illiberal statement of support for his beleagured authority on his blog, there’s been a total silence on the matter from progressives in the city.

They seem to neither want to back the fire service’s rather strange and under-fire equalities policies nor admit that these kind of policies – that have been tirelessly promoted by politicians of the liberal-left – are in fact failing to achieve what they’re supposed to.

The silence of the local MP for The Downs area, Stephen Williams is particularly intriguing. As the only openly gay Lib Dem MP you might have thought he would have some strong views on this matter. Evidently not.

What are they all afraid of? Why are they remaining silent and handing the initiative to Murphy and The Cancer and the right on this issue?

Anyway here’s The Blogger’s take . . .

Is an unholy alliance of the gay lobby and the diversity industry making this city a less tolerant place in the name of equality?

It’s never really bothered The Blogger – in common with the vast majority of Bristolians – that there’s a section of grown men in this city who regularly visit The Downs to play with each others’ willies in the bushes there.

Until very recently there was an unspoken, unwritten, unlegislated and peculiarly Bristolian kind of tolerance observed over what happened up there. None of us have ever been formally told or asked to accept that gay men use the Downs for sex but most of us just took it for granted as something that happens. A little bit pathetic maybe – but not really worth the effort of making much of a fuss about.

The result is that a fragile consensus has quietly been built on this issue over many years. The prevailing attitude seems to be: so what? Yes this stuff is going on but it’s not really that important and it shouldn’t be stopped or prevented because it’s victimless crimes being committed anyway and a broadly liberal attitude on issues like this helps to maintain good community relations.

This unspoken consensus also seemed to include the police who have for years remained very low-key and have appeared to turn a blind eye to a lot of stuff happening on the Downs; the local authority and its Downs Committee who have done very little to see the law enforced; obviously the majority of gay men in the city who appeared to enjoy the freedom they had and, of course, the many, many ordinary Bristolians who have also quietly turned a blind eye and instead had a wry smile or a laugh about these “goings-on” on The Downs that are technically illegal.

This consensus always seemed to work pretty well. Bristol is a relatively tolerant place for gay people. There’s never been crazed mobs of homophobes stalking the streets – or The Downs. Homophobic attacks are few and far between. Even the local press was not especially unsupportive – or at least it was politely silent on matters of sexuality pertaining to The Downs.

All-in-all Bristol might not have the buzz of London or Manchester but it is, on the whole, a pretty tolerant and accepting place for gay people to live and work. Recently Times columnist Matthew Parris said: “In the whole history of mankind there has been no better, luckier, time or place to be gay than Britain in 2007.” Is there any reason why Parris would not include Bristol in that conclusion?

Well that seems to be the case being made by the local branch of gay lobbyist charity The Terrence Higgins Trust (THT); sections of the Avon Fire & Rescue Service’s senior management team firmly in the grip of the latest “equalities” policies and the Trot-influenced Fire Brigades Union (FBU).

It would have been hard to miss the fuss during the last few weeks over the four fire fighters from Avonmouth Blue Watch who were disciplined for bringing the service into disrepute and for the misuse of fire equipment amid hysterical allegations of homophobia from their own managers.

To begin with, these events have turned the city into a national laughing stock. Just about every national newspaper amusedly reported the fact that the local Terrence Higgins Trust had formally complained to the Avon Fire & Rescue Service about a fire crew who may have disturbed some gay men having sex on The Downs one evening.

Remarkably Avon Fire & Rescue Service upheld this complaint and after initially suspending the four fire fighters for three months, they have now disbanded the crew, heavily fined them and ordered them to attend some wanky Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transexual awareness course last week.

These actions, we’re publicly assured by the management of Avon Fire & Rescue Service and by the silence of the Terrence Higgins Trust and FBU – who appear to be providing nil public support to its own members – are all about putting a stop to homophobia and helping create a more tolerant environment here in Bristol.

What a load of bollocks! They’re achieving the precise opposite. The people behind this nonsense – described rather colourfully by one national newspaper reader as “worthless over important idiots who I assume are recruited from mental asylums somewhere in outer space” – are likely to make the city a more homophobic place. They are also likely to have helped create a much less liberal policing and criminal justice environment for gay people in Bristol. What a result!

This has come about because the kind of people working in these charities, lobby organisations and in equalities positions in the public sector generally have completely lost their bearings on these issues.

Generally underemployed (what the hell does a public sector equalities worker actually do all day that is of any productive use whatsoever?), badly educated humanities graduates, they don’t seem capable of even acknowledging – let alone understanding – the consensus the city has quietly but effectively built over many years around this very issue they’re blundering into.

For most of us, the tolerant attitude the city has always shown towards the gay community and their activities on The Downs also applies to the four fire fighters. In our tolerant city, few people seriously view the fire fighters’ childish behaviour as “homophobic” or in any way related to a hate crime and therefore see no need to punish them.

The simple fact is that it doesn’t matter and never will matter to the majority of people in this city that four firefighters from Avonmouth Blue Watch went up to The Downs one evening and right-royally ripped the piss out of a bunch grown men up there playing with each others’ willies in the bushes.

And perhaps with some reservations, most Bristolians were probably equally happy to tolerate both of these groups and their behavior and don’t really want anyone to be punished for anything

This is not, however, the view of the Avon Fire & Rescue Service/THT/FBU equalities set who couldn’t give a toss about any consensus we might already have as a city and instead want to impose a new one – of their devising – upon us. Naturally, in an attempt to stifle any dissent they are likely to receive, anyone who dares to question their arrogance in doing this is – stifle the yawns please – obviously HOMOPHOBIC!!! themselves.

And what they seem to want to impose is a regime in the city where we are forced to respect the right of certain groups to use the Downs as a sex playground as we always have done anyway – while we must not tolerate the childish activities of another section of men who use the place as a bit of a school playground.

How reasonable and fair is that?

The problem here is that this equalities worldview being imposed upon us is based on a theory rather than on the reality of what goes on in this city. And since when have theories been reasonable or fair? Their theory – regardless of the empirical truth – claims that homophobia, racism and sexism are rife in this city. It then randomly attributes the blame for this, with scant evidence, to the working classes – characterising them as crude racist, wife-beating, homophobes.

Since, rather conveniently, this group can’t answer back very easily, it’s simple enough – for those who can – to then argue that what we need are a whole lot of new, wonderful equalities industry values imposed upon us for our own good.

It’s a nice, simple – if crude – theory. It’s got an easily identifiable, unfashionable group to blame who – handily – have no influential voice to answer back with and who no-one’s interested in defending anyway. It keeps the wannabe sophisticated and well-educated middle class liberals who think they’re better than everyone else feeling morally superior and it also creates a lucrative little mini-industry, funded from the public purse, of job-for-life consultants, workers, trainers, policy wonks and academics especially for these middle class idiots.

But what their theory doesn’t do, unfortunately, is engage with reality. This city is not especially homophobic. Neither are the vast majority of the people in it. The opposite is true. This, as we have already seen, is a very tolerant city towards gay people and some of their unusual habits.

So why has this small, noisy, opinionated authoritarian clique of people taken it upon themselves to claim differently and deliberately set out to wreck a long-standing consensus and try to impose a new set of values upon us? And why can’t these authoritarian idiots see that it isn’t possible to impose tolerance from above in the way they want? It will miserably fail as events over the last few week have demonstrated.

Firstly, the equalities set have completely failed to carry their argument, whatever the fuck it is, to the city. All they have done is create uproar and mass sympathy for the fire fighters while garnering significant levels of negative publicity for Bristol’s gay community. This has been further compounded by their sneering “we know best” high-handed attitude towards virtually the whole of the city who happen to disagree with them quite virulently over their actions.

But this is not just a bit of a PR disaster for the fire service. Their efforts to tackle the homophobia they insist is rife in the city have completely backfired. There’s been more negativity and public condemnation towards gay men in Bristol in the last few weeks – since this story broke – than there’s been in the last year.

This episode is not doing the city’s gay men any favours at all. Neither is it doing much for the city’s gay charities and support groups. THT has gone, in the space of a few days, from being a quite serious, reasonably well-respected organisation to, at best, a laughing stock and, at worst, actively disliked.

THT have certainly made their job supposedly working on behalf of gay men in this city a whole lot harder if not impossible. Who’s gonna seriously give a toss about the views of a bunch of people who seem happy to stand by and cost working men with families their jobs over a load of really petty bullshit?

THT, the gay lobby and the rest of the equalities set also need to be aware that things might get even worse. An awful lot of needless attention has now been drawn to gay men and their activities in Bristol. Who would bet against a backlash? And it’ll be interesting to see who the equalities set try to blame for that (step forward now please that all-purpose blame machine – THE MEDIA, or worse, THE DAILY MAIL!!!!).

The other thing the equalities set has managed to do through their own stupidity is to more-or-less force the police to reevaluate their policing policy on The Downs. Within hours of the story hitting The Evening Cancer last week an anonymous police officer was claiming:

“Having worked as a police officer at Redland (which covers the downs) officers were warned off some years ago about driving past and shining spotlights from vehicles into the hedges (to detect offences of illegal acts). This was, again, following complaints from the terrence Higgins trust. Can I suggest you contact Avon & Somerset Constabulary and ask if officers are allowed to ‘pro-actively’ patrol this area to tackle what are actually illegal acts (sex in public). Robberies and assaults do go on at that location because of the nature of what goes on there but many are unreported. The reason the firefighters were not reported to the Police is probably because the police would not pursue such an allegation.”

In the circumstances the coppers have had little choice but to issue denials and reassurances to the public that they do in fact police The Downs as they would anywhere else. The Saturday before last the police told the Cancer (and have reiterated the point on DCI Andy Bennett’s blog):

“Police patrol the Downs in Bristol and deal with incidents as they would with any other area. In fact such is the presence of officers in the area a substantial number of cannabis warnings are issued to people using the Downs.
Whenever incidents of lewd acts are reported to police they are fully investigated and last year saw 250 people arrested throughout the force for such offences including and ranging from outraging public decency to kerb crawling.
Officers will not hesitate to deal with offences positively whenever they are formerly reported to police. “

250 arrests for these kind of offences across the whole force area is piffling and does not reflect anything like the level of activity on The Downs. This seems to confirm that a “light touch” approach has indeed been taken to the policing of the area. There’s little doubt Avon & Somerset could get 250 convictions – if not more – in 6 months on the Downs alone if it were heavily policed, which now looks the grim possibility given the recent public outcry.

Indeed a new consensus seems to be emerging, which The Blogger admittedly has some sympathy with, where if the equalities set want to be intolerant and start threatening ordinary people’s livelihoods in order to impose their set of rather peculiar views, then a lot of ordinary Bristolians in turn are going to start asking why their values, backed up by law, aren’t being imposed. If one form of behaviour must be punished why not another?

So it rather looks like the fire service and their equalities friends have created a new zero sum game for the city to play – “you call us homophobes – we’ll call you criminals” – where we all end up living in a less tolerant and fun place.

That’s some result.

Posted in Bristol, The British Left, The Downs, Trade Unionism | Tagged , , | There are 15 comments

Zzzzzzzzz watch

As a special service to readers The Blogger will be following the Lib Dem leadership election race. Mainly because it promises to be one great long fucking hilarious parade of no-hopers, buffoons, congenital idiots and the plain desperate chasing the biggest non-prize British politics can offer – the chance to say nice things and come third . . .

OK. The story so far courtesy of ‘Tales from the Rocking Horse’ on Guido:

After fingering Ming for his shafting of Kennedy and being forced to eat shit over his cosying up to Hughes, Mark Oaten is now fingering Cable for shafting Ming from behind but Hughes says that he intends to get hold of Cable and if this is all true he and Cable will give Oaten the roasting he is clearly asking for.

Gordon Brown is said to be watching events with interest and with mounting excitement.

First to throw their hat into the leadership ring is John Hemming. Did I just hear you say “who” then? I have no idea either but he’s already emailed his colleagues announcing he’s ready to serve.

He’s even worked out a little political theory all of his own. “The Left/Right Axis,” explains the profound one, “demonstrates an oversimplification of politics. Politics is multi dimensional.” So’s mathematics John but we aren’t about to vote for it mate.

He proudly finishes his address on a, for him, a very exciting high “On issues of diversity I have delivered,” he thunders. Which kind of raises the question: what the fuck are issues of diversity John? And how the fuck have you delivered on them? No doubt all will soon be revealed because John is “taking soundings following this position statement.”

Well, he’s sounding like a right plonker at present if that helps. A thought that’s further confirmed by his blog where . . . I kid you not! . . . he seems to like posting up pictures of kittens!!!

John Hemming's kittens

C’mon Lib Dems give him yer vote. Pan-dimensional diversity with kittens could be just the job to to fill that war-shaped vote winning policy gap couldn’t it?

Posted in Lib Dems | Tagged , | There are no comments yet

BB Roadwatch: "a touch of class"

Motorway

As promised for Blog Action Day . . .

Loudmouth Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary, that privately educated and over-privileged man of the people, has had a crack at campaigners fighting the plans to expand Bristol Airport in The Cancer.

“They badger us and bang on about how the end of the world is nigh because of global warming – but it’s not. Aircraft account for less than two per cent of pollution.

“The biggest polluter is the Government. Taxing to the hilt of petrol and cars hasn’t stopped people driving around in huge vehicles.

“Ryanair has reduced CO2 emissions by 50 per cent and noise pollution by 52 per cent. No other industry has a record like the airline industry when it comes to that.

“We’re doing this despite tighter demands being put on us all the time – but it won’t stop the Swampies of this world climbing up trees to protest about airlines and airports. They should all get a job and get a life.”

Phew, where do you start? Has O’Leary entered a ‘how many stereotypes can you get into the smallest rant competition’? But for the record Mike, I’d love to give up my day job to spend all day fucking up your stupid business and your stupid posh git life.

OK, so maybe there’s an element of truth when O’Leary says that aircraft account for just 2% of carbon emmissions, which is a relatively small amount. But is that the whole story?

Of course not. Bristol Airport expansion will not happen in a vacuum. What also comes with it are new roads to get passengers to this expanded airport. Specifically, an expanded Bristol Airport will mean that the South Bristol Ring Road will be built.

This new ring road is not just a bad thing because of the increased emissions it will generate – which the road lobby can characterise, with a degree of accuracy, as marginal or limited and point their fingers, as they always do, at what’s happening in China and India – it will also divide and destroy long established communities.

Plans for the South Bristol Ring Road are hard to come by – city council planning officers attending meetings on the subject are well-known for their paranoid refusal to sit by maps of any proposed route and refuse outright to be photographed in the vicinity of any visual representation of their proposed road – although it is likely to be routed through Whitchurch, Hartcliffe and Withywood.

These combined communities contain at least 10,000 households and at least 5% of Bristol’s population and – by an extraordinary coincidence – they’re all working class communities. The prognosis, judging by Bristol’s road building projects in the past, for these working class communities is not good. Easton and St Pauls, divided in the 70s by the M32 still suffer and will continue to do do.

City of Culture judge, Jeremy Isaacs, famously described Bristol as “a divided city” and the M32 as “a physical manifestation of this rift, creating a concrete divide between the St Paul’s and Easton communities”. And the city’s long-term response to this? Divide more communities over in the south of the city with roads of course!

Over in Barton Hill – hemmed in by the only section of the aborted inner ring road ever built and by the spine road foisted on the city by the car-obssessed Tories of the early 90s – £50 million of regeneration money has been unable to alter the social realities created when an area becomes carved up by major roads.

The simple fact is that roads through communities destroy them. From the M32 in Bristol to the Westway in London to the freeways of LA. Major roads create major divisions, not just in geography, but in class, wealth, power and access between the communities forced to host the roads and the rest of the city reaping the benefits.

The communities affected by the South Bristol ring road will be no different. Even the talk of the benefits to south Bristol in terms of regeneration from this new road are dubious. Comparisons claiming North Bristol is way ahead of the south because of its road connections are indeed accurate. But North Bristol has direct connections to motorways – major road arteries – and rail connections.

What’s proposed in south Bristol is not a major road artery but a little dual carrigeway that’ll be overwhelmed with traffic the moment it opens. Are we seriously expected to believe that major companies will locate there? Where would you locate your firm? In North Bristol with direct connections to the M4/M5 or on a congested dual carriageway to the south, ten miles from the nearest decent road?

If these road builders were really serious about economically regenerating south Bristol through transport links – rather than just providing a handy little through road for airport traffic across some of Bristol’s poorest communities – they would be proposing an M4/M5 southern link. That’s a proper motorway connecting the M4 and M5 to the south of the city that would deal with airport traffic, ease congested holiday traffic travelling to the south west and provide the kind of transport connections major business need.

Of course there’s no sign of such a proposal because such a road would have to go through the Mendips where all the rich people live. The real Swampies and Nimbys like senior planning officers, wealthy road building civil engineers, pilots and the rest of the technocratic elite living in their convenient countryside idyll aren’t about to have that disturbed are they?

Besides surely it’s madness to run a motorway through the green and pleasant Mendips owned by the rich? But then why isn’t it madness to run a road through Barton Hill? Easton? Hartcliffe? St Pauls? Withywood? The places occupied by the poor?

Blog Action Day

Posted in Bristol, Bristol Evening Post, Developments, Environment, Global warming, Hartcliffe, Politics, Whitchurch Park Ward | Tagged , | There are 2 comments

Notting Hill's radical history

Burn it Down

It’s been light posting this weekend as The Blogger has been laying out Tom Vague’s excellent Bash the Rich Radical History Tour of Notting Hill pamphlet.

It’s a kind of riotous, left wing, pop cultural, psychogeographic ramble through the streets of the forever beating heart of the capital’s left field neighbourhood – Notting Hill – courtesy of anarcho-historian and psychgeographer Vague.

From race course riots to race riots; from Mick Farren’s Social Deviants to Shaznay Lewis’s All Saints; GK Chesterton and Orwell; the Angry Brigade and King Mob; the Portobello Road market stall Vivienne Westwood had before heading south to ‘Let it Rock’; The Clash and Class War; Rough Trade and The Roughler; Police and Thieves – it’s all here – from the Westway to the world – the secret and untold story of the other Notting Hill, where media hype, local protest and class war have gone hand-in-hand down the centuries.

Highlights include not quite as glamorous tales as you hoped, like when Strummer and the boys joined in the Carnival riots of ’76 and got shot by both sides – “searched by policemen looking for bricks, and later on we got searched by Rasta looking for pound notes in our pockets.”

Still, the experience produced a song:

“White riot, I wanna riot, white riot, a riot of my own, black man gotta lot of problems but they don’t mind throwing a brick, white people go to school where they teach you how to be thick, and everybody’s doing just what they’re told to, and nobody wants to go to jail.”

Another almost lost gem is the real story of how ultra cool anarchists, the British Situationists, fell foul of the even cooler and happening Paris Situationist leadership in 1967. Officially this is because the Brits sided with the New York yippies against the euro intellectuals.

However Vague’s story goes that French Situationist supremo Guy Debord – the last word in polo-necked Parisian intellectual counter cultural cool – came to Notting Hill in person and was less than impressed when he found the cream of this country’s urban guerrilla forces watching Match of the Day!

Such is the stuff of anarchist splits. Read and enjoy:

Bash the Rich Notting Hill Radical History Tour (pdf)

Posted in Activism, Bash the rich, Policing, Politics, Race, The British Left | Tagged , , | There are 4 comments

CONgestion charge latest

BMW M Sport Convertible
Isn’t it about time we made more room for people who can afford these?

By Bluebaldee

Bristol City Council in conjunction with the other three local authorities have produced yet another glossy document about how terrible congestion is in the area and what they’re going to do about it. If they were half as good at providing a decent public transport system as they are at producing glossy brochures, none of us would ever need a car again.

What interested me was the opinion of Business West and their mayor-in-waiting, the Merchant Venturer John Savage. On page six of the document, Business West have come out strongly against Workplace Parking Charges, yet they support road user charging and will be lobbying for “clear business involvement in the development of the schemes and in current studies on road user charging.”

So basically what this bunch of tossers are saying is that the rest of us, including the self-employed, disabled, pensioners etc, are going to be forced onto First’s appallingly shit, overpriced and unreliable old rust heaps leaving the roads clear for them to swan around in their BMWs and Jags.

Oh, and don’t charge us to park at the office because that just isn’t on, old chap. And we’d like to make vast profits from all of this public money as well, if that’s ok with you?

John Savage and his Business West cronies really are a dreadful collection of elitist cunts, if you ask me.

http://www.bristol.gov.uk/ccm/cms-service/download/asset/?asset_id=20822071

Posted in Bristol, Congestion charge, Environment, Global warming, Merchant Venturers, Transport | Tagged , | There are 9 comments

The Friday night post: drinking responsibly

They said on BBC News 24 yesterday that people “should be encouraged to start drinking responsibly earlier”.

So I started at 5.00pm today. Not sure it’s such a good idea really.

Posted in Blogging, Bristol | Tagged | There is 1 comment

Rearranging the deckchairs? Or how local journalism works

Here’s a very brief guide to how local journalists do their job.

They claim that they’re overworked and underpaid and that they “hold many of Bristol’s decision-makers accountable on a daily basis“. Ho, ho, ho.

Here’s a press release from the PA published on Tuesday:

Jamelia getting engaged to Byfield

Pop star Jamelia has announced her engagement to footballer Darren Byfield.

“I’m completely over the moon. Darren proposing was a real surprise but I’m totally delighted. I can’t stop smiling!” the 26-year-old said.

The Superstar singer threw a surprise birthday party for Bristol City player Byfield in Birmingham after performing at London’s Olympia.

But the real surprise was to come as Byfield got down on one knee and popped the question in front of family and friends.

The couple have been dating for three years and have a daughter, Tiani, who turns two later this month.

They briefly split over the summer but were soon back together.

Jamelia also has a six-year-old daughter, Teja, from a previous relationship.

The singer is about to start work on her fourth solo album and this December will perform at Nelson Mandela’s World Aids Day concert in South Africa.

She recently became the face of the Model.Me haircare range alongside models Helena Christensen and Erin O’Connor.

And here’s a story on the BBC Bristol website the following day:

Jamelia to wed footballer Byfield

Pop star Jamelia has announced she is to marry footballer Darren Byfield after the couple briefly broke up in the summer. “I’m completely over the moon. Darren proposing was a real surprise but I’m totally delighted. I can’t stop smiling,” said the 26-year-old.

The Bristol City player, 31, proposed at a surprise birthday party the singer had thrown for him on Sunday.

The couple have been together for three years and have a two-year-old daughter.

She also has a six-year-old daughter, Teja, from a previous relationship.

Jamelia, whose hits include Superstar, is about to start work on her fourth solo album.

She has also been lined up to perform at Nelson Mandela’s World Aids Day concert in South Africa.

Now, to the untrained eye it looks awfully like the BBC have copied out the PA release, put the lines in a different order and published it as their own without crediting the source. That’s not journalism is it? It’s typewriting! And theft!

Surely a publicly funded organisation that says it’s “the most trusted news organisation in the world” and claims to recruit the brightest and the best wouldn’t dare do anything so shamelessly, lazy and dishonest.

Would it?

Posted in Bristol, Media | Tagged , , , | There are 8 comments

U-turning and u-turning in the widening mire

The Criterion - St pauls

There’s been an update on the Avon & Somerset site and in The Cancer on the carnival night killing of 35-year-old Somalian, Mohamoud Muse Hassan who was stabbed to death at The Criterion pub in Ashley Road, St Pauls (Blogger passim).

First let us remind ourselves where we were:

“There are no indications it was racially motivated”
Chief Inspector Cath Tarrant, Avon & Somerset Constabulary
16 September 2007

“Avon & Somerset’s story of the murder on carnival night in St Pauls isn’t adding up”
The Bristol Blogger, ‘Dead Strange’
19 September 2007

Then today Avon & Somerset indicate:

“It is understood possible tensions between the Afro-Carribbean and Somali communities may be hindering the police operation”
Bristol Evening Cancer
11 October 2007

Fancy that! One month later and possible racial motivations appear. Who’d have ever guessed that?

Avon & Somerset meanwhile are also now wheeling out their “community leaders” and calling for unity and better co-operation with the police.

Why is it that white people’s “community leaders” are invariably democratically elected representatives but black people’s “community leaders” are invariably selected representatives in the pay of the government?

The Blogger will be returning to this issue soon.

Posted in Ashley, Bristol, Bristol Evening Post, Policing, Race, St Pauls | Tagged , | There are 13 comments

Blog Action Day

Bloggers Unite - Blog Action Day

This blog is about to get B.A.D.

Vowlsie’s idea I’m afraid. I think he might regret it . . .

EXCLUSIVELY this Monday: The Blogger on the environment. Not to be missed!

Posted in Blogging, Bristol, Environment | Tagged | There is 1 comment