"Scotland 'definitely' needs land tax", former finance secretary says | The National, 7 June.
Shona Robison's views on this have been in the public domain for years. We agree; and yet as Finance Secretary she fell silent on the matter and nothing happened.
https://t.co/2JaVyJ5Slr
“I don’t think you and I are very closely related, however, if you are capable of trembling with indignation each time that an injustice is committed anywhere in the world, we are comrades, and that is more important.”
-Che Guevara, Letter to María Rosario Guevara, 20 February 1964.
Note: Che wrote these words in response to María Rosario Guevara, who had contacted him asking whether they were related because they shared the surname “Guevara.” His reply suggested that a shared commitment to opposing injustice was more meaningful than any possible family connection.
Where we saw police - posing as miners, stickers, T shirts etc - inciting a peaceful march, many children with us, to “storm” the barriers at Trafalgar Square. When it all kicked off they were standing alongside the police pointing people out to be photographed or pursued.
At the end of the march violence flared when miners were penned in by police in Parliament Square. Among those arrested included Dave Nellist, Labour MP.
After miners pushed against police lines mounted officers arrived to ironic cries of ‘Seig Heil’ from miners.
At the end of the march violence flared when miners were penned in by police in Parliament Square. Among those arrested included Dave Nellist, Labour MP.
After miners pushed against police lines mounted officers arrived to ironic cries of ‘Seig Heil’ from miners.
26 year old Langston Hughes at Lincoln University in 1927 (he attended 1926-1929)
—Born in Joplin, Missouri February 1, 1901 James Mercer Langston Hughes had already spent two years in Paris working as a busboy in a Montmartre restaurant owned by WWI pilot Eugene Jacques Bullard. It was in that club he first heard the music of Black American jazz greats who fled to France following the war. One of the earliest innovators of “jazz poetry”, Hughes is best known as the Poet Lauréat of the Harlem Renaissance. Hughes died May 22, 1967 in NYC.—
A hidden photograph from the Kovno Ghetto preserves a quiet moment between two young brothers whose lives were lived under extreme fear and uncertainty during World War II.
In 1944, five-year-old Avraham Rosenthal stood beside his younger brother Emanuel inside the ghetto, where daily life was defined by hunger, strict control, and constant danger. Even the presence of children was deeply fragile under Nazi policies.
Despite the risks, their uncle helped arrange for a secret photograph to be taken by ghetto photographer George Kadish, who documented life in hiding. Creating and preserving such images was dangerous, but it became an act of silent resistance and memory.
Not long after, both brothers were deported along with their family to the Majdanek concentration camp, where they were killed. The photograph survived the war and was later recovered, preserving a trace of lives that were nearly erased.
Today, the image stands as a reminder of how even the smallest records can hold the weight of entire lives and histories.
#HolocaustHistory
"Picturesque river polluted with sewage just 13 days after being given official bathing status."
Yep the River Avon at Salisbury was designated as a bathing spot on 15th May and just 13 days later on the 28th the EA have to issue a pollution warning due to E. coli levels. What a shambles.
https://t.co/nC3WWbwgt6
"Southern Water apologises after Winchester milestone removed."
So there's a mile stone on the Andover Road just outside Winchester, it's been there for 100s of years, guess who digs it up and then dumps it along with a load of other building waste in the local landfill?
Yep, step forward Southern Water.
https://t.co/ebnmnOoDAn
"South East Water hunts for £100m to plug its finances."
Why in God's name would anyone want to lend South East Water £100 million?
Put it this way, once we've nationalised Thames Water guess who's next on the list?
https://t.co/gKWN2FtZec
"Welcome to sewage-on-sea: Britain's most fashionable tourist hotspot Whitstable is being despoiled by floods of effluent pouring into the ocean, just as the taps in homes and businesses run dry."
People in Whitstable and Kent really do get it from both ends, your sewage is dumped on to local beaches and your tap water gets cut off simply because the water company can't keep your supply running. Bloody hell.
Brilliant state of the nation piece by David Jones, @DailyMail
https://t.co/0sHmAWYWMv
‘Vice-president and state department look to push far-right idea that mass migration is causing civilisational decline’.
Trump team back far right narrative in the wake of the tragic murder of Henry Nowak.
https://t.co/kem2yVLXdX
A pleasure to welcome @ASLEFunion young members to MML this afternoon for a special tour & to discuss collaborative work on trade union history and political education ✊
“ A parcel of rogues” R. Burns. So many in thrall to this person and goodness knows why. Burn’s “ To a Louse” is apt.
Scottish Secretary thanked Mandelson for help with bid to become MP https://t.co/lV5edmcJge
RMT General Secretary Eddie Dempsey: "We want to see all our members on the railway receive the same benefits of public ownership and this includes outsourced workers."
https://t.co/ENnPoSGCMp
Being working class isn’t about manners or accent.
It’s about whether you depend on your wages to maintain your lifestyle, says British trade unionist @MickLynch4AGS.
“If you have to get up when the alarm clock rings and go out and do a job – and you depend on your earnings, rather than your assets – you are working class,” he explained.
The red rebel of Wellington College - Esmond Romilly horrified Britain’s Establishment by turning from privileged schoolboy to anti-fascist fighter, writes MAT COWARD
https://t.co/IjcV1wyrGe