Saturday, 7 June 2008
Tuesday, 3 June 2008
Monday, 26 May 2008
The Dark Heart of Eurovision
At my weekly tennis game with my Russian friend Vlad, I congratulated him on his country's Eurovision win. With some relief, he said none of the songs were the sort of music he listened to.
But at least you didn't have the humiliation of coming last, I said.
"Your song could never win", he replied. "East Europeans would never vote for a black person."
Then it struck me, it's not bloc voting that is Eurovision's problem, it is a mild undercurrent of racism. Andy Abraham was the only black artist on the night.
Historically, Eurovision doesn't fare much better. No black lead singer has ever won the contest. The only possible exception is Dave Benton who came first as part of a duet in 2001.
But it's unlikely to change. Balkan nations and former Soviet republics have an unenlightened attitude to race. An extreme example of this is Zenit St Petersburg, a football club that refuses to buy black players.
This year's winning entry also included an Aryan public relations masterstroke. Alongside the singer Bilan - who frequently flashed his white bare chest - was the blond Olympic figure skating champion Yevgeny Plushenko, who pirouetted on artificial ice to the song. An odd spectacle even by Eurovision standards.
But the final word goes to my tennis partner Vlad.
"Then again" he said, "the British song was so bad it would have failed whoever sung it."
But at least you didn't have the humiliation of coming last, I said.
"Your song could never win", he replied. "East Europeans would never vote for a black person."
Then it struck me, it's not bloc voting that is Eurovision's problem, it is a mild undercurrent of racism. Andy Abraham was the only black artist on the night.
Historically, Eurovision doesn't fare much better. No black lead singer has ever won the contest. The only possible exception is Dave Benton who came first as part of a duet in 2001.
But it's unlikely to change. Balkan nations and former Soviet republics have an unenlightened attitude to race. An extreme example of this is Zenit St Petersburg, a football club that refuses to buy black players.
This year's winning entry also included an Aryan public relations masterstroke. Alongside the singer Bilan - who frequently flashed his white bare chest - was the blond Olympic figure skating champion Yevgeny Plushenko, who pirouetted on artificial ice to the song. An odd spectacle even by Eurovision standards.
But the final word goes to my tennis partner Vlad.
"Then again" he said, "the British song was so bad it would have failed whoever sung it."
Sunday, 25 May 2008
Saturday, 24 May 2008
Centre right party is dead, long live the party of the centre right
Monday, 19 May 2008
Sports day... before the earthquake
Here are some moving images of sports day in Beichuan middle school.
The pictures were taken the day before the earthquake.
Beichaun was close to the epicentre - 1,300 puplis and teachers from the school were killed or are missing.
The pictures were taken the day before the earthquake.
Beichaun was close to the epicentre - 1,300 puplis and teachers from the school were killed or are missing.
The photos were taken from a Chinese teacher's blog. The site has now been blocked by Chinese authorities but it's still available on Google.
China earthquake vs Hurricane Katrina
Natural disasters are never easy. One week on, the destruction of the Sichuan earthquake is still only now being understood. Yet criticism of the Chinese government's response is growing.
Some of the criticisms are justified. It took two days for China to agree to international help. Painful, especially as aid agencies say the first 72 hours are the most important.
However, the Chinese government took the disaster seriously from the start. Fifty thousand troops were sent on the first day. Another 30,000 were deployed within 48 hours. Prime Minister Wen Jiabao was on the scene on day one and President Hu Jintao got there 5 days later.
Compare that to America's response to Katrina. It took 36 hours for the hurricane to be declared an "incident of national significance". National Guard units were unable to be deployed because many of the men were in Iraq and President Bush only made it to New Orleans two weeks after the hurricane hit the city.
Hurricane Katrina and the Sichuan earthquake are different beasts and comparisons are almost impossible. But in terms of government response, China has outshone America.
Some of the criticisms are justified. It took two days for China to agree to international help. Painful, especially as aid agencies say the first 72 hours are the most important.
However, the Chinese government took the disaster seriously from the start. Fifty thousand troops were sent on the first day. Another 30,000 were deployed within 48 hours. Prime Minister Wen Jiabao was on the scene on day one and President Hu Jintao got there 5 days later.
Compare that to America's response to Katrina. It took 36 hours for the hurricane to be declared an "incident of national significance". National Guard units were unable to be deployed because many of the men were in Iraq and President Bush only made it to New Orleans two weeks after the hurricane hit the city.
Hurricane Katrina and the Sichuan earthquake are different beasts and comparisons are almost impossible. But in terms of government response, China has outshone America.
Sunday, 18 May 2008
Saturday, 17 May 2008
Crewe & Nantwich: Why Gordon's in trouble
"I have always been a Labour voter, but never again. I will vote Liberal."
(Retired railway worker Joseph Thorley) fiddles in his pocket and produces a piece of paper. "Look. For the last 12 months I got £257 for my pension. Now, because of Gordon Brown and his taxes, I get £248.98."
Read the full article.
The Political Orphan
Hello and welcome to Floating Voter.
A world view that's not blinded by an affiliation to a political party
Mission statements always seem pretentious. Take the The Economist's for example. It claims to take part in:
"a severe contest between intelligence, which presses forward, and an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing our progress."
Good but it's not for me. I'll just end up getting knocked and bruised in this intelligence "contest". Over at spiked.com they want to raise:
"the horizons of humanity by waging a culture war of words against misanthropy, priggishness, prejudice, luddism, illiberalism and irrationalism in all their ancient and modern forms."
Hard to argue against a prejudice war but raising the horizons of humanity... Moi?So I'll keep my intent simple. I'm a political orphan. Left? Right? Neither. I've never had any affiliation to any party. Any topic discussed here will be agenda-free. A politically unbiased look at the world.
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