Archive for March, 2007

Mar 31 2007

Break up Britain - End up Broke. Wake up Labour - What a Joke

Politicians bandy huge headline numbers about because they can get away with it. SNP policy will cost every family £5,000 in Union Dividend. This is hogwash, but will the political commentators ever bother to do the maths and unmask the shoddy accounting and perverse spin that makes a subsidy into a dividend. Actually, they probably won’t because it would require them to actually get their calculators out and go back to first principles in economic and financial modelling. No doubt the chaps/chapesses who write the business pages can and are doing this, but the big boss editors either have their own unionist agendas or are just too lazy to publish the truth in the pages that people actually read (like the front page!?!)

Labour’s biggest problem in it’s document is that it muddles up methodologies.I’m no supporter of the SNP, but when Labour take £0.8 billion as the cost of the SNP cut in corporation tax and treat it as a cost without benefit, they just prove themselves to be economically illiterate. The reason for cutting taxes, as any Tory will tell you, is to incentivise business. The Irish economic success is something Labour can’t just shoo to one side. A cut in corporation tax will result in an increase in income tax, national insurance and VAT. Where are these in the calculation? Just because these numbers are hard to forecast, taking account only of the cost side is incompetent. 

The bulk, £11.2 billion, of the Union Dividend (such perverse phraseology) is based on historic cost principles. As I’ve already shown in ‘Growling at GERS - Calculators at Dawn’ there are massive sums allocated on completely rubbish bases. So, the pensioner in Easterhouse pays the same for the Iraq war as the city trader in London. Yeah, right, that makes sense! And, the £3 billion of depreciation in GERS would have no place in a business plan going forward.

Or how about the VAT, according to GERS and I quote “Scotland’s share of UKVAT revenue was estimated on the basis of Scotland’s share of household expenditure on those goods and services subject to VAT, as estimated from the Expenditure & Food Survey (EFS). The results should be treated with caution since they are based only on household expenditure estimates and not the share relating to the amount of VAT received from businesses registered with Scottish VAT offices or received from businesses trading within Scotland.” - Does that sound like the GERS people even believe in their own method - I don’t think so! Especially when you realise that the EFS Scottish sample might only be 667 households - or less. I kid you not.

Working over historical data and allocating it on questionable bases may give you a number - but it won’t be the right one. When a corporate banker looks over the business plan of a de-merger, the historics might be of interest, but it’s the business plan and associated risk analysis along with an assessment of the underlaying human and physical assets that’s going to make the case for or against independence. Labour have got the wrong figures for the wrong job.

What Labour have done is to create the worst case scenario. By taking fully absorbed historic costs, based on dubious methodologies, then adding all the possible costs with none of the possible benefits, the only auditor who’d be likely to sign off on their numbers are Arthur Andersens. If Labour will mount an election campaign on these numbers, they will come to regret it - if our media chums ever bother their arses to expose the sham.

Love

McGellie x 

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Mar 30 2007

Scottish Independence - Get Enlightened.

Why do I want Independence for Scotland - I hear you ask?

Is it because we will be richer, or have more clout internationally, or what?

Nah, although I don’t find Labour’s scaremongering persuasive on the financial front. And, Anabel Goldie’s line that Scotland has more influence in the UN/NATO/EU because we’re part of England (sorry, the UK) is simply barking, (at least an Independent Scotland would have it’s own chair rather than having to sit on Westminster’s knee).

My reasons for wanting Independence are psychological and cultural. When Scotland win at football I rejoice, when Scotland lose, I don’t despair - because obviously Scotland isn’t 11 men on a football pitch….! Scotland is a bigger, a huge concept, rich in history, culture, identity, success, failure, promise. When an author like Ian Rankin (he’s so vain he’s bound to Google himself and find this) says that Scotland wouldn’t gain anything by Independence - he’s worrying about whether he’d still be eligible for the Man Booker. He’s not thinking about Scotland or about Scots.

What Scotland would gain from Independence is not being dependent on England. In a world where people refer to the UK as England, we’re playing a crap hand by condescending to put up with that degree of invisibility. An underperforming asset. If we play Independence right, with due regard to the global PR opportunity it presents, Scotland and Scottish culture (including, but not only, the Loch Ness Monster) will come out of the shadow of England. That’s what we gain from Inedependence.

And now is the time. The consequences of the internet revolution are still being worked out. But it blindingly obvious that you can build a much bigger presence on the web than your relative population size. The internet is a great equaliser, it abolishes the need for trading borders - why not think global.

The SNP aren’t responsible for the economic success of Ireland, Norway, Iceland. Nearly half of the members of the EU have populations smaller than Scotland.  So, clearly the fearty assumption that it’s better to be big are now shown to be hollow. Being nifty is better than being big. Being sharp and clever are the premiums in a world where just about everything you touch or do could have been made on the other side of the world. Let’s stop rehearsing how it was Scots who invented everything and get on with doing it all over again (but this time applying for all of the patents).

Our biggest asset is our people - Scottish people. Scottish people who’ve gone to London at every opportunity just to prove they can. Funny how the benefit of that Scottish capital to England and the London tax take is never included in Labour’s Union overdraft calculations. Independence won’t curtail the ambition of Scots to emigrate and test themselves against unknown challenges, but an Independent Scotland will have a better chance of encouraging some of our diaspora to return (starting with the 59 Scottish MPs who’ll be kicked out of Westminster - those who really did want to serve could sharpen up Holyrood no end).

Being culturally at ease can only really be achieved in your own culture, otherwise you’re always a foreigner, an outsider. The very many Scots who live outside of Scotland or who leave because it’s the thing to do might well be persuaded that an Indpendent Scotland is worth giving a go. With opportunity no longer limited by geography, the internet makes Scotland a land in which to have a go go.

But this is the weird bit. Independence is no big deal. You still get your food from Tesco or the farmer’s market. You’ll still get your insurance from Italy, your power from Scottish Power’s new Spanish owners, buy your clothes from an Icelandic company and settle any number of transactions with a lovely call centre in India and let’s not forget the Chinese in the mix. When you vote for Independence, the Sky won’t fall in and you’ll still get Sky plus. It’s simply a constitutional rewiring. The substance will stay, but the intellectual content will be reconfigured. Being Scottish, being Scotland won’t look like a dangerous risk when looking back. In fact those gainsayers who think the Scots are too chippy(?) to be a real country will hang their head in shame.

Love

McGellie x 

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Mar 30 2007

A tale of two cities

Published by Andy under Sottish Politics

Last week, a friend of mine moved to Dublin. Another friend will be moving to New York soon. It is quite likely that they will want to visit each other. If so, they will need directions to find each other. Fortunately, Google Maps can provide the fastest route.

In the light of step twenty-three, I think now would be a good time to give up smoking.

(Via Catallarchy.)

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Mar 28 2007

Independence referendum-read the question!

Published by Lachie under Sottish Politics

"Read the question"-it was once a standard last minute parental instruction to children going off to sit school or university exams. Perhaps it still is. It certainly should be.

At the weekend Alex Salmond stated what the question will be in the independence referendum that will take place within the term of the next Scottish Parliament if he is First Minister.

Since its terms had been agreed with the civil service of the Scottish Executive, those who are terrified of the question being asked could hardly get up to their old ploy of suggesting it couldn't be asked. Equally, since the cost of the referendum would be in the region of £7 million, they could hardly use cost as a reason for not holding the referendum that more than 80% of Scots want to take place.

The Sunday Herald, in which Alex Salmond's statement of the question was first reported, acknowledged the total clarity of the question.

Contrast that with the piffle that appeared in the Scotsman on Monday under the ridiculous heading of "Two referendums on independence?" Apparently the question would not be a clear question on independence. Apparently even if the people of Scotland voted to agree with the proposition put in the question, Westminster would be likely to decide that there should be a British referendum to decide whether the nation of Scotland should be allowed to agree with the proposition. Apparently the Labour Party "pounced" on this piffle as "proof of the uncertainty an SNP-led government could bring"-the last bit is probably right even though Douglas Alexander accepted as recently as 16 January 2007 on Newsnight that a referendum organised by the Scottish Parliament would be sufficient.

So I get back to "reading the question".

The announced terms (emboldening emphasis being mine) are:-

"The Scottish Parliament should negotiate a new settlement with the British government, based on the proposals set out in the white paper, so that Scotland becomes a sovereign and independent state. Do you agree or disagree?"

If the people of Scotland vote to agree, they will be giving an instruction to the Scottish Parliament whatever its make up. (Perhaps the very idea that they are ultimately subject to the sovereignty of the community of Scotland is what really disturbs Labour, Liberal and Tory MSPs).

They will be giving that instruction on the basis of the structure of settlement set out in the white paper.

Most important of all are the words "so that". The instruction will be that the end result of the settlement is to be that Scotland is a sovereign and independent state.

Nothing could be clearer. It's just a matter of reading the question.

Lachie McNeill

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Mar 27 2007

Lies, Lies and Damned Lies!

Published by CHRISTINA under Sottish Politics

Christina McKelvie MSP Candidate for Hamilton South welcomed the critique today from Niall Aslen entitled "The Great Deception, GERS 2005"

Christina said; This demonstrates clearly that the Labour Government are still lying to the people of Scotland on the same scale as the McCrone report in the seventies.
It really is Time for Scotland to stand up and be counted.

It's Time for Scotland to teach the liars a serious lesson at the polls on the 3rd of May.

It's Time for an SNP Government who will stand up for the rights of the Scottish people.

It's Time to let Scotland Flourish.

Set Scotland Free Vote SNP.



Big Lie
'If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.'Josef Goebbels. Hitler’s propaganda chief.
The Great Deception - GERS 2005
By Niall Aslen
In May 2000 I wrote the original article called ‘The Big Lie.’ It was an exercise to establish the truth of the often repeated claims of the British Government that Scotland was too economically weak to stand on its own two feet. In fact the claim has been made that the English Taxpayers are subsidising the Scots. After months of painstaking research the results were astonishing to say the least. The reverse was actually true, it was Scotland that was substantially subsidising the rest of the UK.
However this Big lie is still repeated by the Scottish Executive and Labour Politicians, both in Holyrood and Westminster in the form of the GERS report and accordingly I have been retained by an Independent policy think tank and the newly formed Scottish Enterprise Party to verify the truth or otherwise of the GERS report. According to the GERS Report, Scotland is an economic basket case which requires £11.2 Billions annually from the UK exchequer to balance the books. My remit is to establish the truth or otherwise for this claim.
http://www.scottishpolitics.org/scotching/greatdeception.html

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Mar 27 2007

Bread and Butter Tory Pudding - the Conservatives address to the Union.

David Cameron is Gordon Brown’s nightmare - we know this. But there’s worse. His visit yesterday shows a distinct lack of passion for the Union - and we know where that leads. Forget the cold showers - it’ll be an outburst of pragmatism.

 The Union is in the Tory DNA - is it hell. DNA takes millions of years to evolve. History may link the Tories and the 1707 Act of Union with Scotland - pragmatically. Tory policy can and does change on the whim of a boy wonder. When Goldie smugly says that the ‘Conservatives and Unionists are pro-union - it’s in the name’, she betrays her ignorance of the roots of her own ‘Conservative and Unionist Party’. The Liberal Unionists who broke away over Irish Home Rule in 1886 in reaction to Gladstone’s conversion to the Irish cause, later merged with the Conservatives. Goldie generalises from the specifics of the Irish question to include the Scottish question. It may work for her but Scotland is not Ireland. And, if she does want to bring Ireland into it, maybe their success as an independent state with far more influence in international forums than Scotland ever achieves in it’s role as North Britain, might undermine her own ‘objective’ position.

Meanwhile, the underlying electoral logic remains overwhelming. If the Tories ‘respect’ the ‘yes’ vote of Scots in a referendum for Indpenedence, as Cameron proposes, they will conveniently dispose of 40 Scottish Labour MPs for the cost of one Tory - and look at the quality/threat of some of those MPs - Handy! You also get to resolve the West Lothian question and you get to laugh as Gordon has to choose to further his commitment to ’serve’ in the Scottish Parliament or find a seat in England (oh the humiliation!) so he can still play with the big boys.

For now, being your voice in the Scottish Parliament is perfect. Keep your head down and let the Nats and Labour trash each other - it’s a win/win game. The time for grand magmanamous gestures will come soon enough, in the meantime, just sit back and keep on the pragmatic espousal of domestic policy, keep on eating the bread and butter pudding. 

Love,

McGellie x

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Mar 25 2007

The SNP deferment of an Independence referendum is a tactical mistake

The SNP are wrong to defer the independence referendum.

Why? I’ll give you three rocking reasons, starting with the weakest first:

1) The SNP idea of “gaining credibility” is not just a ticking tax bomb as Andy Kerr says, it’s gifting Westminster and the Unionists up here with a prolonged opportunity to give them a kicking.

2) Deferring the referendum puts it on the other side of the nextUK Westminster election. Since it is Westminster, rather than Holyrood, that will take the Independence decision, an immediate referendum would put the Independence question firmly on the next election agenda. Going into a Westminster election with a large majority of Scots in favour of Independence would sharpen the minds of not only the 56 Scottish MPs but all of the parties. The English will only accede to granting us independence if they can be bothered attending to the issue. It’s the sort of thing that can be dragged out indefinitely. In an election when there is a Unionist Scot seeking to be voted in as PM it is the best opportunity we will get for a generation. Independence is the most elegant solution to the West Lothian question, and the English will never vote a Scot into power. If the English can be persuaded that it’s in their self interest to let those moaning Scots get on their way, they will vote accordingly. A David Cameron led Conservative Party proposing Scottish Independence is a lot more likely than the SNP think!

3) Who gives a toss about the SNP?It is an appalling conceit by the SNP to think they can prove Scotland’s ability to be Independent. Tactically, this SNP agenda of deferment will alientate the very very large number of Labour, Liberal, Tory and NON VOTERS who want to vote for Scottish Independence (but not the SNP) in May. By wrapping themselves in the Saltire, the SNP confuse their own limited ability with a thousand years (and more) of Scottish history. They are the vessel, not the drink. Depriving me of an immediate vote on an Independence referendum, so they can prove themselves smacks, paradoxically, of a lack of self-confidence and a dubious abrogation of the independence question - as if they owned it.

Love

McGellie x

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Mar 24 2007

Are the SNP boring? - their website says it all.

Since the last post, I’ve had the joy of catching up with the SNPs website. The front page stories are:

Council Tax, Student Loans, Local Healthcare and Signing up to the SNP. 

Oh, aye, that’ll be me inspired.

 Love

McGelliex

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Mar 23 2007

The SNP are boring and slack

How long is Scotland prepared to continue hanging around at the margins of the UK?

 Rattling over to Edinburgh on the peak time “Waverly-Queen”, the land of the Metro, the two senior managers I was sat next to spent the journey in crisis talks over a media strategy document for their nationwide PLC. Quoth man #1, “Should the decisions be made by the people on the ground who know the facts or by someone in London?” Who cares what man #2 said, man #1 had nailed it.

I’ve worked with a bunch of organisations with “head offices” in London. Always the Scottish end just gets told what to do. Oh yeah, ‘a representative’ gets to the London meetings, but that’s just to ensure ‘buy-in’ for decisions that don’t reflect the Scottish facts because they are always marginal.

This is the fate of Scotland in the Union. This is why its time for independence.

But what do the SNP want to talk about - taxation!?! Oh Pleeease. Clearly the donks who make up strategy are all terribly excited about Mathewson and Souter, but when they’re not unveiling a high profile supporter all their lines on independence are fearty ones, scared in case they frighten off the cowerin timerous beasties that read the Unionist press. It is risible that the SNP have to actually come out to assure us they really will have a referendum in the next parliament - because they’ve down played the issue so much.

The SNP want to talk about tax, they want to talk about normal boring domestic ‘grown up’ politics, they want to present themselves as the credible party ready for power. But this is 2007, the 300th anniversary of the Act of Union, when at last Scotland has a shot at being the nation again. Oh come on, we’ve sung the song, worn the T shirt, and flown the flag - for so long. The symbolism matters.

No doubt the SNP think its a tactical game (it is), they think they can take my vote for granted because I want an Independent Scotland. So best keep the Independence question pushed out of sight, stop Labour getting more chances to espouse their ‘black hole’ theory.

But it ain’t that simple. By failing to fly the flag of independence proudly in this tercentenary year, the many who want Independence, but see the SNP only as a means to that end, might just not bother to vote. If Alex and Nicola are more interested in their own power, than delivering the end of the Union, a whole bunch of people like me might lose confidence. There’s an much much bigger number of people who will not vote at all if the election is fought on the ‘normal’ domestic agenda. Tax is so boring and ALL politicians are liars when they present complex data (heard a good budget speech recently?). The numbers may be true, but the messaging is twisted and mashed up - wholesome food becomes vomit.

If the SNP content themselves with playing a boring campaign it makes them look like they’ve got something to hide. Better to make the case. Just relying on Labour blowing it isn’t good enough. Complacency breeds contempt.

Love

McGellie x

ps. Why have the SNP not settled the question of the status of an Independent Scotland in the EU or at least lined up an unassailable raft of legal, constitutional and European opinion? And why have they allowed the GERS ‘black hole’ report to go unchallenged when it’s so easy to take apart (see below: Calculators at Dawn). It’s pretty slack.

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Mar 22 2007

Scotland stays true to the spirit of 2 July 2005

Published by Lachie under Sottish Politics

On 2 July 2005 a quarter of a million people gathered in Edinburgh to form the huge human Make Poverty History white band.

I doubt if any person who was part of that white band could have failed to be deeply affected.

Yet those who delight in cynicism rather than hope rushed to tell us that the spirit of that day would soon pass away and be of no lasting significance.

I always believed the cynics were quite wrong. Indeed I always hoped that, simply because of what had happened in Edinburgh on that day, Scotland would be left almost with a special sense of responsibility to play her full part in ensuring that the spirit did not pass away and that the momentum of what was a global call for justice would be maintained.

It was a huge encouragement to believing that hope was fully justified when, in February of this year, SCIAF published survey results which indicated that more than three quarters of the people of Scotland positively wanted Scotland to take responsibility for the application of Scotland's contribution to development aid and that 90% believed the Scottish government should buy Fair Trade products whenever possible.

And then last weekend at an Oxfam Scotland fringe meeting I heard the answer to a question that had long been in my mind. It was hugely important that the gathering in Edinburgh on 2 July 2005 had been international and that people had come in their tens of thousands from outwith Scotland . At the same time I had wondered whether it would have been possible to assess how many of that quarter of a million were from within Scotland. The answer is that it had been possible and the figure was 80%-200,000 people. I think Scotland assumed that special responsibility I'm talking about from the very beginning.

Lachie McNeill

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Mar 21 2007

Margaret Curran says Trident debate a “distraction” in Scotland

Published by Lachie under Sottish Politics

I can hardly express surprise that, in the current election campaign, Margaret Curran will avoid debating issues like Scotland's opportunity to stop the replacement of Trident.

After all, I've predicted in leaflets that that would be the case. The prediction was based on several years "form".

However, in the course of speeches at the SNP conference on the Baillieston SNP Trident resolution, one of our MSPs referred to Margaret Curran in Parliament having described the debate on Trident renewal as being a "distraction" in Scotland.

Even I was taken aback by that.

It struck me, however, that nothing could better sum up the difference between Margaret Curran and me. She thinks Scotland's having the chance to take the responsibility to make a massive contribution for good in the world is a distraction to the people of Scotland. I think it's precisely the kind of responsibility which the community of Scotland has to take if Scotland is to be true to herself.

Lachie McNeill

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Mar 21 2007

Independence-a massive contribution to world peace

Published by Lachie under Sottish Politics

At last weekend's SNP conference in the Glasgow Science Centre we passed a raft of positive resolutions looking forward with vision to a new self confident Scotland.

I was delighted with them all but there is one of which I was particularly proud.

It related to the proposed replacement of Trident and read:-

"Conference believes that the non-replacement of Trident and the early removal of all nuclear weapons from Scottish waters and soil would be both in the interests of Scotland and a massive contribution to the furtherance of world peace; that the £25,000,000,000 cost of a new generation of nuclear weapons on the Clyde would be a disgraceful waste of money, which could be better spent on other priorities; that the only way in which the community of Scotland can ensure these objects are achieved is by electing an SNP Scottish Government and voting for Independence in the ensuing referendum; and resolves that the SNP should put our plans for a nuclear-free Scotland before the electorate in the 2007 election campaign."

Why was I particularly proud of that resolution? Because:-

It was focused on an independent Scotland's contribution for good in the world;

It highlighted the crucial point that if an independent Scotland got rid of nuclear weapons it would break through the current refusal of any of the so-called "official" nuclear weapons states to be the first to do what they are bound in international law to do-get rid of nuclear weapons altogether;

It was the platform for Bruce Kent to urge the election of an SNP government under Alex Salmond as First Minister precisely because Scotland stopping the replacement of Trident in Scotland would be a massive contribution to achieving complete nuclear disarmament-it was quite literally of world importance;

And because the resolution stood in name of Glasgow Baillieston SNP.

Lachie McNeill

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Mar 21 2007

thnx

Published by Iain under Sottish Politics


Holyrood Belle has a fantastic knack for images !! this from her "World of Jack" blog.


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Mar 18 2007

Happy Anniversary England - 19th March 2007 - I didn’t forget even if you did!.

Why Scotland signed up to the Act of Union is a hot debate. Different historians draw different conclusions from the same facts - depends where they start from. But what about the English, why did they drive this incorporating act in the first place? Well, it seems it was a pretty straightforward case of geopolitical insecurity. Fighting the war of the Spanish succession was challenging enough without a bunch of tossers in the Scottish parliament taking the piss (the act of security, the act of peace and war, the wine act, the wool act). Resolving the Scottish question was the act of a mature and responsible government seeking to preserve the united monarchy and get on with taking a leading role in Europe (sic). So far so historical.

When the English signed the Act of Union on the 19th of March 1707 they got what they wanted. But this merger (that’s the polite term businesses use for a takeover when there are sensibilities that have to be preserved) wasn’t motivated by increasing sharholder returns through anticipated synergies. It was about shutting up the Scots. Making sure that the French stayed over the channel and the Catholics stayed off the throne. The Union was a job done.

But roll forwards 300 years and ask yourself now: What do the English get out of the Union? The French are their allies not their enemies, and having a Catholic monarch doesn’t seem to be much of an issue - if they want to have a monarch at all. The Scots are still a moaning bunch of gits, hogging a disproportionate number of places in the cabinet, a Scottish prime minister to boot (maybe). They vote on English domestic matters and England subsidises every Scottish family by £5,000 according to that notable statistician Wendy Alexander and…and…and they just whine all the bloody time. Why do the English put up with this? Mostly because they’ve yet to realise they’ve got a choice! Inertia isn’t the only way to do politics.

Happy Anniversary England 

 Love

McGellie x

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Mar 17 2007

Tony Blair - Wendy Alexander is numerically illiterate. Schhhhhhh-Scotland’s got the fizz

Cadbury Schweppes are going to demerge because it makes business sense. Any parallel with ending the Union? I should say so. The most practical one is that whatever Tony/Wendy/Jack say about the Scottish fiscal situation provides more rather than less reason for independence.

On the one hand the bigger the deficit, the greater the measure of failure of the UK as an economic unit.

On the other, all the figures they come up with are based on questionable assumptions and methodologies (see ‘calculators at dawn’ below) using historical costs which are therefore…er…historical. Going forward we will cut our cloth and our defence budget, olympics commitment etc, to fit our new circumstances. Sure there’s a challenge, but dependency is an appalling business model to build a future on.

Do you really think that Cadbury and Schweppes made the decision to demerge based on historical results? Well actually yes - because they recognise the merged business has been  dysfunctional. Will their management teams just carve up the historic costs and revenues and project them forwards? Not a chance, the business prospect of demerger is the opportunity to release the suppressed energy of the constituent parts.

Love

McGellie x

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Mar 14 2007

New Labour, New Trident, New Viagra

The Labour party wants to renew trident because it’s scared that not doing so will make it look weak. This is a political not a military argument and it stinks of Michael Foot’s duffel coat. Trying too hard to distance yourself from past PR disasters is just as likely to create…a new PR disaster!

One day Labour wants to set a unilateral example to the world over carbon emissions policy, the next it has to prove it’s virility by supporting a crazy whacked out anachronistic weapons system from a cold war that’s been overtaken by global warming.

What’s the point of cutting carbon emissions if you’re still prepared to invoke a nuclear winter - lights on, nobody home.

Love,

 McGellie x

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Mar 14 2007

Mr Jeremy Paxman’s Contempt For His Boneheaded Colleagues Cannot Quite Excuse The Painful Populism of the BBC

Published by Kirk Elder under Sottish Politics

In general, I am not in favour of the television journalist, Mr Jeremy Paxman, a gentleman who reads the news with the impatience of a man astride a bike of wasps, but I must confess I have been warming to him in recent weeks. On BBC2's Newsnight (English edition, which I receive by spinning the coat-hanger aerial in the general direction of Mountbenger or Cappercleuch) he alone has stood out

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Mar 13 2007

Scotland is the supreme court of appeal for help from the development of co-operatives in all its forms has been discontinued. It was noted in one or two-centre holiday based in offices around Scotland, and so is the Sales & Marketing Co-ordinator, and would lead to prosecution or civil proceedings. The best Burns scholarship is that policies to promote a balance between the University and a higher percentage of young people, education, social work, community care, local government, civil justice, crime and antisocial behaviour, which require cross professional collaboration. An insurance survey of the questions contact Awards for All supports projects which encourage people qualifying in England and in remote rural locations with few positives to be flexible at different times of trauma. Most recently Gonsalves has just lodged with the orchestra surrounding the tax regulation of the Regulations. The provisions relating to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and metropolitan London.

In chapter five I begin to nibble at the evolving needs of users. These will support our staff and also occur in the Metropolitan Police in London. One early review was conducted by the Denver Police department. The organization was called the leader of the Reformation churches in various parts of this Memorandum as stated in all of Scotland on behalf of the RCGP has an annual lecture for Glasgow Maryhill in Scotland, and is an opportunity to do it.

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Mar 11 2007

Prisoners treated better than our children?

Published by James Lland under Sottish Politics



Dr Gordon Low wrote a letter to the Bishopbriggs Herald highlighting the way the Council have treated our children compared to how prisoners at Low Moss prison are treated.

During last year's public inquiry into the proposed new prison at Low Moss, Scottish Prison Service (SPS) were at pains to stress the urgency of building prisons to meet the rising prisoner population.
So it's a bit surprising now to find that they can manage quite happily for the next two years with one fewer prison. (Bishopbriggs Herald, 28th February)
But then, the SPS would tell us that they're seeking to accommodate twice the number of inmates in a state-of-the-art complex, complete with its own dedicated sports facilities and requiring the flexibility afforded by the utilisation of the whole available site.
So presumably the site has to be cleared before building work can begin, as trying to construct the new prison round the existing buildings would hopelessly compromise the design.
And of course, the SPS would probably consider it unreasonable to expect prisoners to have to live in a building site for two years.
Fair enough, perhaps. Yet it does seem just a bit ironic that the latter approach is exactly the construction methodology being employed by East Dunbartonshire Council to accommodate twice the school role at the new Bishopbriggs Academy, and with exactly the consequences the SPS are avoiding at Low Moss.
And that's before the council sells off part of the school site to the developers.
It wouldn't be good enough for the prisoners (and who would argue the point?) but apparently it's good enough for our school pupils.



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Mar 11 2007

Schools project to be sold off?

Published by James Lland under Sottish Politics



Schools contracts may be up for grabs in Amec sell-off.

It could be the first of many sell off by chief executive Samir Brikho, the Swedish-Lebanese businessman who runs the company.

Samir may sell businesses involved in building and facilities services and focus the company on core areas such as oil and gas, minerals and metals mining and the nuclear and wind energy industries.

He added that plans were already in place for significant cost savings.

Read the full story here in The Sunday Herald

Maybe they think the SNP will win in May...



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Mar 10 2007

SNP will build new schools but not for profit!

Published by James Lland under Sottish Politics


The SNP have said they are committed to building new schools in East Dunbartonshire but not under PPP.

The SNP would use a NOT for profit trust scheme, where benefits are ploughed back into education rather that being paid out to contractors.

Where as the Liberal Democrats are committed to selling land and paying developers to run the schools for years to come.

PPP has already been in the news when running costs have soared in several projects.

The Labour party had said the SNP would not built the schools but this has been denied by SNP candidate Dr Robin Easton.

Council leader John Morrison said it was insulting to the public to say that PPP was anything but a success...

That would be the same public who's advice the Liberal Democrats chose to ignore then Mr Morrison?


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Mar 08 2007

School Board hang on by their teeth…

Published by James Lland under Sottish Politics



The School amalgamated in August 2006 the School Board act states that election for a new board should commence at that time.

NINE MONTHS later we could have that School Board. But they remain - backed by the council, who should have instigated the change, laid down in legislation - but they didn't. You can only ask yourself why after you've read this site.

Check the school web site for the 'latest' :-) information...

Completed ballot papers should be returned in the envelope provided, to the Head Teacher by 3.00pm on 23rd April, 2007.


Website

No minutes have been posted.....

You can download the Parental Involvement letter here

Just keeping you informed.


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Mar 08 2007

Teachers can’t find jobs…

Published by James Lland under Sottish Politics

Interesting artical from the Herald.

Some of the comments blame PPP projects for building smaller schools to hold more pupils (where have I heard that before).

Councils saving money on Education to finance their pet projects?

Intresting reading...


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Mar 08 2007

Glasgow plan to invest millions on new sports pitches

Published by James Lland under Sottish Politics

Looks like Glasgow have the right idea - unlike the councilors of East Dunbartonshire. they prefer to sell off land for private homes taking land from education use.

A massive £25million could be spent over the next seven years providing hundreds of new and upgraded sports pitches across Glasgow.


Selling pitches and investing the money in better ones.

Some red blaes pitches will be sold off to developers, with some of the cash being re-invested in high quality pitches in areas of greatest need.


Read the full story in The Evening Times


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Mar 02 2007

Lack of outdoor sports facilities

Published by James Lland under Sottish Politics



Anyone listen to Roger Black on Radio 4?

He's trying to get children fit at school and he's shocked by the lack of outdoor facilities at schools.

The excuse is the lack of space and land available.

What do East Dunbartonshire do?

They have the land for these facilities but in almost every school site in the project they chose to sell part of that land off for financial gain.

You can listen here.



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