Friday, 15 May 2015

North Shields: In Fading Light-or why the cod has gone and the boats bob alongside the quay

The death of fishing in North Shields; 
A modern morality tale 

I know bloody Shields is out there man

In Fading Light is a film by Amber Collective; starring Dave Hill, Sammy Johnson, Joana Ripley, Joe Caffrey, a fishing boat, the North Sea, some fish and of course, North Shields

Now Amber collective is something I have for many years admired. Film-makers/writers/ photographers who lived amongst and documented a range of communities across the north east of England and in doing so capturing poignant moments; witnessing as frequently they did, their decline.
What is there not to like about 'In Fading Light'. It is set in North Shields, my home town-six generations plus on my mother's side with more than a few fishermen, drinkers and hard 'uns.
Most of the action takes place on an anchor trawler, fishing the North Sea; home port of North Shields. At core is the relationship between daughter and estranged father (the trawler skipper). There is also the Geordie sexism at its worse and then best (dealing with a woman on the boat and coming to terms with that she more than holds her own place). It has humour and heart but bitter sweet in an all too predictable ending. And for me, it was a gift seeing such a rich and unromanticised piece of North Shields and in particular the working life of North Shields quayside.

You might have to listen carefully as the dialect is true to its community. And that is a jewel to cherish, it reminds how after 52 years of exile, I have all but lost my first tongue.

I take my hat off to the crew and cast as this is a superb film in all senses. The actors learned to sail the trawler and to fish supported by the local fishermen. The cast were thrown in deep end an all. No wussy method acting for these boys and girl (and film crew) who were sent out by the mad director to be filmed in a full throated North Sea gale/storm. More authentic like, better tinge of green to the vomit spray. There is a deadpan part to the doco on this film's DVD where the lead said they thought it odd that as they were heading out to film a sequence in the teeth of a gale, all the deep water fishing boats were heading into the quayside as fast as they could seeking shelter, while waving cheerily at those blurry idiot actors headin' off to their deaths.

Film, story and doco are all rewarding and heart breaking. Last time I was on North Shields quay (visiting from Australia in 2011)-it was almost empty of boats and real industry based on the sea at its doorstep. Now it has 'apartments' and a lifestyle industry (didn't see any nouveaux cuisine mind amongst the posh nosh shops) and there is no longer a stink of fish and guts to salt the brine. The fish and chips are not the cod of old. But as the doco on the making of this film identifies it is the story/testament to another north eastern industry and community that supported it lost. Seeing the fishermen in the doco saying there are no fish left to harvest in the North Sea was sobering. That they had the insight to see it as a consequence of greed-run while the times are good and when its gone-its gone.

The DVD is available (with others including two series of fine short films) from Amber. Images here are the copyright of Amber Collective. http://www.amber-online.com I thank them for the use. I also note they are trying to ensure their vast and important collection of material is preserved. Look at their site and what they do an if your hand reaches into your pocket. Be Generous. They hold the lifeblood of our Geordie communities in their archives.

POST BRITAIN ELECTION MAY 2015 BLUES...Reprised...


Postcard London 1980
So the polls said it was neck and neck with Millaband a bit in front mabbe! So seeing David Cameron's smug face driving 'austerity' Tory policy of take from the masses to feed the greedy for the next five years had me reaching for an outsize crate of aspirin, concentrated fig juice, tincture of opium and locking' meself in me cone of silence (The Fall on continuous play) and moaning' loudly.
Someone else on hearing the election result Auckland graffiti 2006
Joost when I thought it could not get worse I saw the election returns for UKIP across the North East-no seats but bloody Nora-what was in the wata up there? But then there were steak knives thrown in to boot! "Labour lost" the cry went up from the jackals of the middle ground, "because they (Miliband) were too socialist"-return Labour to Blairism (pale blue Tory toadying for little oiks into celebrity, spin and smoke and mirrors politics who want their pound of everything and give nothin back to the electorates they represent but debt, poverty and grinding disillusion). Miliband too socialist? Mabe it were summat hallucinogenic in tap water. Well fook me! Maybe it was we forgot our socialist roots. Look north of the border and see the people's choice in action and people like Gordon Brown should hang their heads in shame. Another five years of tory destruction and too little done by Labour to offer a true alternative on the hustings.

So to make meself feel better I re-read the 1945 Labour Party election manifesto “Let us Face the Future” . And it is still a call to the fight in my eyes. Despite globalisation it is the same division, the few (and greedy) feeding of the many, investing in poverty for return of profit.

Thanks to Tony Benn (whose last book asked people to read this manifesto and debate if there is still a place for a socialist vision to drive political change) and the archive for the whole document. These are excerpts below that resonate with me ageing socialist heart for due consideration for all those who think the time for this is locked in the past. Is it Fook! This post is dedicated to Tony Benn and Tom Uren-socialist warriors both.

...In the years that followed, the "hard-faced men" and their political friends kept control of the Government. They controlled the banks, the mines, the big industries, largely the press and the cinema. They controlled the means by which the people got their living. They controlled the ways by which most of the people learned about the world outside. This happened in all the big industrialised countries...

...Great economic blizzards swept the world in those years. The great inter-war slumps were not acts of God or of blind forces. They were the sure and certain result of the concentration of too much economic power in the hands of too few men. These men had only learned how to act in the interest of their own bureaucratically run private monopolies which may be likened to totalitarian oligarchies within our democratic State. They had and they felt no responsibility to the nation...

...But Big Business knows that this will happen only if the people vote into power the party which promises to get rid of the controls and so let the profiteers and racketeers have that freedom for which they are pleading eloquently on every Tory platform and in every Tory newspaper...

...They accuse the Labour Party of wishing to impose controls for the sake of control. That is not true, and they know it. What is true is that the anti-controllers and anti-planners desire to sweep away public controls, simply in order to give the profiteering interests and the privileged rich an entirely free hand to plunder the rest of the nation as shamelessly as they did in the nineteen-twenties.

Does freedom for the profiteer mean freedom for the ordinary man and woman, whether they be wage-earners or small business or professional men or housewives? Just think back over the depressions of the 20 years between the wars, when there were precious few public controls of any kind and the Big Interests had things all their own way. Never was so much injury done to so many by so few. Freedom is not an abstract thing. To be real it must be won, it must be worked for.

The Labour Party stands for order as against the chaos which would follow the end of all public control. We stand for order, for positive constructive progress as against the chaos of economic do-as-they-please anarchy...

The nation wants food, work and homes. It wants more than that - it wants good food in plenty, useful work for all, and comfortable, labour - saving homes that take full advantage of the resources of modern science and productive industry. It wants a high and rising standard of living, security for all against a rainy day, an educational system that will give every boy and girl a chance to develop the best that is in them...

...The Labour Party stands for freedom - for freedom of worship, freedom of speech, freedom of the Press. The Labour Party will see to it that we keep and enlarge these freedoms, and that we enjoy again the personal civil liberties we have, of our own free will, sacrificed to win the war. The freedom of the Trade Unions, denied by the Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act, 1927, must also be restored. But there are certain so-called freedoms that Labour will not tolerate: freedom to exploit other people; freedom to pay poor wages and to push up prices for selfish profit; freedom to deprive the people of the means of living full, happy, healthy lives...

...Jobs for All.

All parties pay lip service to the idea of jobs for all...

Our opponents would be ready to use State action to do the best they can to bolster up private industry whenever it plunges the nation into heavy unemployment. But if the slumps in uncontrolled private industry are too severe to be balanced by public action - as they will certainly prove to be - our opponents are not ready to draw the conclusion that the sphere of public action must be extended.

They say, "Full employment. Yes! If we can get it without interfering too much with private industry." We say, "Full employment in any case, and if we need to keep a firm public hand on industry in order to get jobs for all, very well. No more dole queues, in order to let the Czars of Big Business remain kings in their own castles. The price of so-called 'economic freedom' for the few is too high if it is bought at the cost of idleness and misery for millions."...

...a high and constant purchasing power can be maintained through good wages, social services and insurance, and taxation which bears less heavily on the lower income groups. But everybody knows that money and savings lose their value if prices rise so rents and the prices of the necessities of life will be controlled...

...planned investment in essential industries and on houses, schools, hospitals and civic centres will occupy a large field of capital expenditure. A National Investment Board will determine social priorities and promote better timing in private investment. In suitable cases we would transfer the use of efficient Government factories from war production to meet the needs of peace. The location of new factories will be suitably controlled and where necessary the Government will itself build factories. There must be no depressed areas in the New Britain...

...the Bank of England with its financial powers must be brought under public ownership, and the operations of the other banks harmonised with industrial needs...

...By these and other means full employment can be achieved. But a policy of Jobs for All must be associated with a policy of general economic expansion and efficiency as set out in the next section of this Declaration. Indeed, it is not enough to ensure that there are jobs for all. If the standard of life is to be high - as it should be - the standard of production must be high. This means that industry must be thoroughly efficient...

...The Labour Party intends to link the skill of British craftsmen and designers to the skill of British scientists in the service of our fellow men. The genius of British scientists and technicians who have produced radio-location, jet propulsion, penicillin. and the Mulberry Harbours in wartime, must be given full rein in peacetime too.

Each industry must have applied to it the test of national service. If it serves the nation, well and good; if it is inefficient and falls down on its job, the nation must see that things are put right.

These propositions seem indisputable, but for years before the war anti-Labour Governments set them aside, so that British industry over a large field fell into a state of depression, muddle and decay. Millions of working and middle class people went through the horrors of unemployment and insecurity. It is not enough to sympathise with these victims: we must develop an acute feeling of national shame - and act.

The Labour Party is a Socialist Party, and proud of it. Its ultimate purpose at home is the establishment of the Socialist Commonwealth of Great Britain - free, democratic, efficient, progressive, public-spirited, its material resources organised in the service of the British people.

There are big industries not yet ripe for public ownership which must nevertheless be required by constructive supervision to further the nation's needs and not to prejudice national interests by restrictive anti-social monopoly or cartel agreements - caring for their own capital structures and profits at the cost of a lower standard of living for all...

Public ownership of the fuel and power industries... Public ownership of gas and electricity undertakings will lower charges, prevent competitive waste, open the way for co-ordinated research and development, and lead to the reforming of uneconomic areas of distribution. Other industries will benefit.

Public ownership of inland transport. Co-ordination of transport services by rail, road, air and canal cannot be achieved without unification. And unification without public ownership means a steady struggle with sectional interests or the enthronement of a private monopoly, which would be a menace to the rest of industry...

...Public supervision of monopolies and cartels with the aim of advancing ;industrial efficiency in the service of the nation. Anti-social restrictive practices will be prohibited...

...The shaping of suitable economic and price controls to secure that first things shall come first in the transition from war to peace and that every citizen (including the demobilised Service men and women) shall get fair play. There must be priorities in the use of raw materials, food prices must be held, homes for the people for all before luxuries for the few. We do not want a short boom followed by collapse as after the last war; we do not want a wild rise in prices and inflation, followed by a smash and widespread unemployment. It is either sound economic controls - or smash.
    
The better organisation of Government departments and the Civil Service for work in relation to these ends. The economic purpose of government must be to spur industry forward and not to choke it with red tape. 

Agriculture and The People's Food
Agriculture is not only a job for the farmers; it is also a way of feeding the people. So we need a prosperous and efficient agricultural industry ensuring a fair return for the farmer and farm worker without excessive prices to the consumer. Our agriculture should be planned to give us the food we can best produce at home, and large enough to give us as much of those foods as possible.

Our good farm lands are part of the wealth of the nation and that wealth should not be wasted. The land must be farmed, not starved. If a landlord cannot or will not provide proper facilities for his tenant farmers, the State should take over his land at a fair valuation. The people need food at prices they can afford to pay. This means that our food supplies will have to be planned. Never again should they be left at the mercy of the city financier or speculator. Instead there must be stable markets, to the great gain of both producer and consumer.

Everybody says that we must have houses. Only the Labour Party is ready to take the necessary steps - a full programme of land planning and drastic action to ensure an efficient building industry that will neither burden the community with a crippling financial load nor impose bad conditions and heavy unemployment on its workpeople. There must be no restrictive price rings to keep up prices and bleed the taxpayer, the owner-occupier and the tenant alike. Modern methods, modern materials will have to be the order of the day.

There must be a due balance between the housing programme, the building of schools and the urgent requirements of factory modernisation and construction which will enable industry to produce efficiently.

... Labour's pledge is firm and direct - it will proceed with a housing programme with the maximum practical speed until every family in this island has a good standard of accommodation. That may well mean centralising and pooling of building materials and components by the State, together with price control. If that is necessary to get the houses as it was necessary to get the guns and planes, Labour is ready.

And housing ought to be dealt with in relation to good town planning - pleasant surroundings, attractive lay-out, efficient utility services, including the necessary transport facilities...

...at the earliest possible moment, "further" or adult education, and free secondary education for all.

And, above all, let us remember that the great purpose of education is to give us individual citizens capable of thinking for themselves.

National and local authorities should co-operate to enable people to enjoy their leisure to the full, to have opportunities for healthy recreation. By the provision of concert halls, modern libraries, theatres and suitable civic centres, we desire to assure to our people full access to the great heritage of culture in this nation.
Health of the Nation and its Children

By good food and good homes, much avoidable ill-health can be prevented. In addition the best health services should be available free for all. Money must no longer be the passport to the best treatment.

In the new National Health Service there should be health centres where the people may get the best that modern science can offer, more and better hospitals, and proper conditions for our doctors and nurses. More research is required into the causes of disease and the ways to prevent and cure it.

Labour will work specially for the care of Britain's mothers and their children - children's allowances and school medical and feeding services, better maternity and child welfare services. A healthy family life must be fully ensured and parenthood must not be penalised if the population of Britain is to be prevented from dwindling.
Social Insurance against the Rainy Day

The Labour Party has played a leading part in the long campaign for proper social security for all - social provision against rainy days, coupled with economic policies calculated to reduce rainy days to a minimum. Labour led the fight against the mean and shabby treatment which was the lot of millions while Conservative Governments were in power over long years. A Labour Government will press on rapidly with legislation extending social insurance over the necessary wide field to all.

But great national programmes of education, health and social services are costly things. Only an efficient and prosperous nation can afford them in full measure. If, unhappily, bad times were to come, and our opponents were in power, then, running true to form, they would be likely to cut these social provisions on the plea that the nation could not meet the cost. That was the line they adopted on at least three occasions between the wars.

There is no good reason why Britain should not afford such programmes, but she will need full employment and the highest possible industrial efficiency in order to do so...

...(Aim for) A World of Progress and Peace...

...The economic well-being of each nation largely depends on world-wide prosperity. The essentials of prosperity for the world as for individual nations are high production and progressive efficiency, coupled with steady improvement in the standard of life, an increase in effective demand, and fair shares for all who by their effort contribute to the wealth of their community. We should build a new United Nations, allies in a new war on hunger, ignorance and want.

And the effective choice of the people in this Election will be between the Conservative Party, standing for the protection of the rights of private economic interest, and the Labour Party, allied with the great Trade Union and co-operative movements, standing for the wise organisation and use of the economic assets of the nation for the public good. Those are the two main parties; and here is the fundamental issue which has to be settled...

...In the interests of the nation and of the world, we earnestly urge all progressives to see to it - as they certainly can - that the next Government is not a Conservative Government but a Labour Government which will act on the principles of policy set out in the present Declaration.

See the whole manifesto from Archive of Labour Party Manifestos
Copyright © 2001 PoliticalStuff.co.uk . All rights reserved.



Saturday, 9 May 2015

Channelling Martin Amis-A Review and Rant on reading "The Second Plane" (2008)

Now Mr Amis and I go a long way back. Him as a writer an' me as the reader. I have had great shouting' matches with his post modernist novels. Admiring his cleverness with words and going' apoplectic, left yammering when he hits the straps of clever clogs, smug bastardy. I've hoyed more Martin Amis books than any other writer over a long and varied reading history that started as a bairn with The Dandy, Jules Verne and Charles Dickens-alreet, and the librarian's all time favourite, Enid Blyton. So, "London Fields" into the wall-yer a big southern softie! "Time's Arra" sent into orbit over Auckland. "Yella Dog"-binned and then buried under concrete. And on it goes..."Experience" I just wanted to chew me knackers off in rage. "Koba the Dread" borstal of the undead followed by six losses in a row by the Toon. Not only doos he seem to have swallowed both volumes of yon biggest, buggeriest Oxford Dictionary but he's quite capable, like the dog with the homework, of spitting up big chunks of it when an occasion presents to show off.
Afta too mooch exposure ta Amisism 

So it goes, but always I was left with an itch that he wasn't joost toking the piss, mabe I was missing' out on summat. That the sneaky wee twat might have summat useful to say-I was just too unwashed in-between me lugs to get it in one bite of me sandwich.

Then there was the Amis/Hitchens marriage. I have a lot of time for the scribblings of the late Mr Hitchens his ability to scrutinise and analyse a topic and provoke thought in the reader. The times I've found meself scratching me head and rubbing me bum muttering "who'd ave thought eh!" Unravelling a Hitchens gem like an old fashioned toffee where all the pleasure is on the sucking. I do not always agree, but then sum of me fiercest arguments are when I fall out with meself.

So I was positively amazed when I recently picked up and read me way through Martin Amis's  "The War Against Cliche". That there was no significant urge to immolate me moleskin pants in turps and flamethrower them out a gully trap with a Brinsley Schwarz CD only came as a suprise three quarters through it. I thought significant old age must have mellowed me blind. I took me pulse just in case but grudgingly had to accept-summat big had shifted. So a few weeks ago I stood in a queue at Elizabeth's of Newtown, Sydney, purveyor of old books, and counted out me pennies for Huraki Murakami's "Underground:The Tokyo Gas Attack and the Japanese Psyche" and a slim volume by Mr Amis called the "The Second Plane'.

Undoing the bio-organic, gluten free string and smoothing back the the bleached brown paper-wrapping (made from pulped Amis novels) I picked up and tenderly sniffed the slightly frayed, as pictured book previously owned by one JPJR McNamara of Cambridge. His one comment written in blue ink (not biro people) was "Horsehit". I guess he hoyed this so far it reached Sydney Australia. Anyhow like Chopin poised above a plate of Nocturnes me fingers descended on the opening pages...

Now it helped that recently, me interest had been piqued by me eyes going square trying to make sense of reading threads to stories in New Matilda (loveable larrikins left of John Lenin). In these some of the threaders (worm brain busters and cumudgins) state as fact that the 11 September 2001 New York/USA attacks (and the later London bombings-as well as numerous events tagged by the lying, toadying Western media) were not the work of Bin Laden/al-Qaeda but a Mossad driven or even a combined Zionist/Big America conspiracy. For sooch believers it is thus: the towers could never have collapsed from the impact of two planes; 19 terrorists could not have hijacked four planes and coordinated an almost perfect action of terrorism; Jewish people working in the Twin Towers area did not front work that day after being texted by Israeli intelligence/consul services or the American Tax Department-take your pick; the evasions evident in the subsequent Wuba driven American investigation such as the "Final Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States" which although running to 567 pages is not definitive on what happened, how it could happen. Although having read the bloody thing a number of reasons come to mind including: hapless communication between competing agencies, arse covering on a massive scale, government cuts and increasing anger at the American homeland for its insular and frequently bullying interventions in global conflicts and political changes it did not like or support-might go some way to say why 11 September occurred and as for Tony Blair...a poodle of gargantuan right wing ideology, puffed up like a frill necked lizard with enough toothless suck to strip a pineapple bare-enough said.

So coming up for air at end of "The Second Plane" I think Mr Amis (as with his comrade in rationalism-Mr Hitchens) nails it. There is both (as with Mr Hitchens writin of the time) stuff written in the heat of the event and then following some consideration-further down the line with reflection). In brief, he sees us descending from a time of reason (and the rise of secularism) back to the time of the believer. This is happening across most religions where extremism dominates. He describes the effects of such extreme religious beliefs as good excuses for 'ignorance, reaction and sentimentality." Underpinned by "the desire for the approval of supernatural beings." People whose world view is -It is so because I believe it is so and because I believe this and you don't-you have no value or right to exist and it is my duty to eradicate you-He defines islamist to describe another branch/root of fascism and points out the blindingly obvious-the theological driven war of beliefs between factions who loathe each other as much, if not more then the west/christians. He also identifies the pointlessness of rational discussion where reason is not valued and life (particularly of those branded others) worth even less.

As with Mr Hitchens he sees this as a war against extremism, a fight between those who believe in humanity/human rights/equality including the right of women to stand shoulder to shoulder with men and a small but strong band of ideologues who believe in their, as they see it, God driven right to exterminate, control and reduce the greater majority of the world to their subjugation (slavery). As for the rights of women and children...as long as they exist in a small dark box like existence where they have zero autonomy-even thought is questioned, and a life as defined by men channeling on behalf of the mystery man in the sky, then they can draw breath. Tunnel vision with vicious and brutal consequences as evidenced when you look outside of the areas which interest the west-such as mosques, market places, remote and isolated communities.

Martin Amis rightly refers to this thinking and ideology as 'the cult of death'. Sadly in Australia this has been taken up as a catch cry by one T. Abbott, but bugger all else has taken root in his understanding other than the other great cliche 'the war on terror'. Christopher Hitchens (Love, Poverty & War : After September section 2004) calls it islamist facsism-and sees this as having little difference from fundamentalist christian fascism; fellow believers in there is only one way-their way. We should be wary of sooch ideologies taking a more poisonous hold than they already have in this world. Totalitarian, just another model of jack-boot, it gives nothing of value to the world but takes everything and what ever our individual view on religion the cult of death is not representative of islam. For this reason we should call all forms of extremism for what they are 'fascism' and fight it in this light. For example the 'Reclaim Australia' or 'PEGIDA' and even UKIP, we should oppose them using religious extremism as an excuse to attack the greater islamic community. As Mr Amis puts it the difference between islam and islamist. Might take a bit of thinking by the English Defence League but there is a marked difference.

Lastly, although their are gaps in our knowledge and our governments (the West) who hide things we the people should know-and a lot of bad things. The conspiracy is more who was protected (the Saudis for example), the incompetence of the agencies who love to use their big budgets to spy on us but in real terms-deliver little, learn less and add bugger all value to the lives of the people they are sworn to protect. Response to New Orleans showed the same old incompetence, followed by blaming, cover up and delivering any old head on a plate with an apple in its mouth and a stick of parsley up the jacksy. Just old school hiding shit which makes the mawkish government setting of memorial agendas stick in the craw. Its the rank and file, front line troops, first responders, the victims and the blind lady who sits atop of the Old Bailey who pay the price-our governments/leaders just go on and on, singing hymns, marching in their finery and blasting more lives into smithereens. These attacks occurred-who was at fault were not hijacked, murdered or left with life long illness and trauma.

Like many, or so I expect, I have struggled to follow the logic on such events from the perspective of Noam Chomsky. I concur with Mr Chomsky-that our use of language, context to describe events in the west such as 11 September and I guess the recent attack against Charlie Hebdo is not the same dialogue or response we use to consider a bombing in Khartoum or Kabul. We are hypocritical at naming the faults of others before considering our own and the frightening acceptance of the oxygen we breathe without questioning how it taints us. I respect those who examine the ethics of morality and politics but cannot always agree with their findings or the construct of their hypothesis. For me the equation is simpler and one of which I was raised with and will probably die still holding is all such attacks, where-ever they occur, carried out under what guise, the greater good, apple pie democracy or the sky daddy-are evil. No ideology/cause justifies the price. All of those lives lost in such ways across the planet are exactly that, lives cut short, and with them hopes, dreams, human stories-in short people who no longer breathe amongst us and who are often forgotten, overwhelmed in the sound bite or ideological dispute-the bigger picture in which they do not feature and no longer matter. That is sad and something we should, where we can continue to give witness, so they are not entirely forgotten or trampled on and buried under the dust of history passing.

Reading this small book, you get a sense of history shifting and as all good writers will do, it makes the reader think and question as to what that may mean and what our responsibility may be in changing the course of extremism as it impacts on our lives and communities. We are due a paradigm shift if we mean to go on. Summat we owe our children and the children of the future.

Oh an' that Martin Amis- he's alreet. Fer now.

May 2023: I were saddened, surprisingly so ter hear yon Amis junior had popped his writing hand. At 73, that's still with a bit of life on the bone! And ter go like old mate Hitchens. I took some pleasure in his last novel that were not a novel, pretentious twat!"Inside Story" It were good although Phoebe Phelps were a bit  over drawn - nonetheless there was nourishment to be had. Vale Mr Amis


Saturday, 2 May 2015

MAYDAY 3 May 2015 Sydney-A spectacular turnout on an overcast day


Aye well, another year and lift these old knackers* into a truss and set off into Sydney town for another call to arms-the 125 celebration of May Day. It were threatening to be  a wet one and on the telephone tree; ok-nettie thingie (but none of that twitter/Instagram stuff) it was sounding as if there were folk who were not going to risk the drenching to stand present. Then on Tyneside, their march on Saturday only drew 400, that and the 3 zip loss at Leicester had me knickers knotting in a way that would make an onion bawl. Sam (MUA) and meself (CPSU and honorary MSU) joined the shoppers on public transport to Town Hall, moaning as only old unionists can about the rat cunning of the current mob attacking working conditions and how many we (the combined unions) would draw to a Sunday May Day.







Acknowledging the traditional owners and custodians, people
of the land the Cadigal-Wangal and those amongst their ranks who have in the last year have passed on. This was a fine call and the minutes silence a time to remember the set and blood this cause is built upon.








Well, it was like last year where a wide cross section of unions and social action groups were in attendance. And all though some unions were short in numbers (including CPSU), it was made up by the passion pumping through the growing crowd. Old faces, friends and comrades-it is good for the heart to be part of this! So thanks one all who attended and marched: enjoy the photographs:

Mr Donovan selling them red thingies

That young lad knows his Billy Bragg "Power in the Union"
Watch for zero hour contracts

MUA Here to stay!








The kids from Socialist Alternative-bless 'em


Not to mention being pissed upon by Hockey et al


MUA out in force






The oldies still heed the call!



*Knackers as in the awld Geordie meenin of that woord: "Two flat pieces of stone, or hard wood charred at the ends and used as castanets."