community?

Blossom: What Scotland Needs To Flourish

Lesley Riddoch

BlossomI’ve been over preoccupied with the independence referendum of late. I’ve always taken a keen interest but it’s taken an obsessive edge in the last couple of weeks.
I decided that I was getting trapped in the same old self-referencing group of commentators online (because the mainstream press is beyond hopeless and not a source that any rational adult would use in this debate) and that I needed to expose myself to a different point of view.
Riddoch uses history, personal anecdote and old-fashioned journalism to expose what she sees as the underlying problems facing Scotland.
It’s a surprisingly enjoyable read given it’s nature and I certainly found it enlightening – especially when she talks about the consequences of our feudal past.
I personally think she underplays the potential problems with some of the solutions she favours and oversells the benefits of social activity in the countryside but it is hard to resist a vision of a much less centralised Scotland with empowered local communities and with land ownership moved out of the hands of the very few.
If you think that there’s nothing much wrong with our country as it stands then I suspect that this book will only infuriate you. If, like myself, you despair at the feeling of powerlessness at the heart of contemporary politics then there’s lots of food for thought to be found here.

Rating: A-

oof?

How To Be A Woman

Caitlin Moran

Moran’s book is a funny autobiographical feminist polemic.
Each chapter illustrates an aspect of growing up and living as a woman using events in her own life.
Her anecdotes are usually hilarious, occasionally moving and nearly always enlightening.
I found much to admire in her take on feminism, but that’s not too surprising given how well it chimes with my own views.
It’s currently available as a cheap paperback or ebook and is well worth buying.

Rating: A-

stv?

Election 2007
So the polls closed not long ago here in Scotland and the first genuinely close, actually interesting Scottish Parliament election reaches it’s denouement.

pocket potato?

Tony Benn
Saint Jude’s Infirmary
Nick Doody
Richard Herring
Get Up Stand Up, The Three Tuns, Edinburgh

It’s not often you find yourself at the very epicentre of extreme cognitive dissonance but I managed it last night.
As mentioned before I’m friends with the guys in Saint Jude’s Infirmary and I went along to this gig because of the early start and finish suiting my commuting schedule. I knew it was a night of comedy, music and politics, but I really wasn’t prepared for how weird it was to watch your friends be supported by Tony Benn?
First off they showed a trite and overly simplistic film pushing the anti-WMD agenda. I happen to agree with that agenda but I do wish that they didn’t talk down to people so much.
Then Tony Benn wanders up to the stage and for the next 45 minutes or so talks about politics. The man is still pretty sharp for 81 years old, but his talk was filled with crowd pleasing rhetoric and very little of actual substance. He took some questions but they were all soft soap stuff. Mind you it wasn’t really the kind of crowd where you could ask him difficult questions about his role in government, etc.
Next, Saint Jude’s Infirmary, who I continue to have no perspective on. It’s hard to be objective when you know people quite that well.
The first comedian was Nick Doody, who was really quite funny with his drink and relationships stuff, I quite enjoyed it.
Last act was ex TV comedian Richard Herring, who did a blue act with an absurd interlude about potatoes, apples, French and English – the pedantic little bugger. I laughed but it wasn’t that great.
So yeah, from left-wing politics to knob jokes via the music of friends in the space of a couple of hours. Really weird experience.