Sunday, 23 December 2007
Monday, 17 December 2007
News less promising
While sceptics may not find the arguments particularly compelling, the hearsay within the industry spells doom for journalists and foresees some form of revolutionary change in the world of media very shortly.
Just yesterday the BBC World Service in a short radio documentary made it clear that the public, it seems, is no longer interested in impartiality. Almost two months ago, the National Union of Journalists celebrated its 100th birthday with a series of demonstrations and rallies in the wake of an obvious crisis in the media industry. The BBC and ITV job cuts have long left the headlines, but the effects of the cuts have already manifested in many ways not always appealing.
The Union people are divided over the future of free press. The more pragmatic have moved on to the Web, while the more orthodox have labelled the Web 2.0 'rubbish' . Futuristic videos started appearing, predicting an ultimate meltdown of media companies and online search engines, rendering traditional journalism of news gathering redundant.
Dark times are upon us. Especially upon the students of journalism and media.
Wednesday, 12 December 2007
Basing my decision on what really matters: the cull of Bendi Buses
The London mayoral elections are not until next May, but the race is already on. Ken Livingston and Boris Johnson have been throwing feces at each other for months now. The latest feces throwing contest evolves around London transport system.
The Bendi Buses
In a brief interview with Nick Ferrari on LBC radio (12 Dec) Boris ridiculed Ken's favouritism of the bendi-buses and accused the bendi buses of exacerbating the congestion problem in central London. Johnson promised to cut their numbers, before eventually phasing them out altogether.
However, the Bendi buses provide easy access to all those who may require extra space and lower platforms. It's not just wheelchair users, but also those with luggage (and there's plenty of people who go to work with suitcases) and those with bikes. It also provides an alternative to double-deckers that many find sickening.
The Wind of Change
According to London Elects , the last election in 2004 had a staggering turnout of 37%. Poorly drawn and even more poorly articulated policies might be the problem. Lack of choice and alternative may be another problem.
This time around, many want to close the chapter on the reign of Ken, but for all the wrong reasons. It is rather irritating to hear so many people speak of change when they clearly recognise that there is nothing to change to.
The hope remains that it's just talks. Like with general elections during Tory’s years of glory, many spoke of voting for Labour, but when barricaded in that little booth of anonymity, still voted Tory. That is likely to be the case in the upcoming mayoral elections.
Thursday, 6 December 2007
Merry Christmas and Stop Ruining the Planet
There's much to be said about Christmas - a festive holiday that now begins in October and, for most people, ends in January with a grand pile-up of credit card bills. Restaurants, bars, clubs and even pubs had started advertising their ‘exclusive’ and ‘ultimate’ Christmas plans even before I started shopping for a Halloween pumpkin. So, there is very little to be said when after such grandiose run-up you emerge on Christmas day without any gifts for your loved ones. And that's the high time to get philosophical.
If you start by pondering aloud, in an as-a-matter-of-fact manner, “why, oh, why do I have to buy?”, any reasonable person would just give up trying and make a mental note not to get you anything worth more than 2 quid for next Christmas.
If, however, they manage to miss the sarcasm in a haze of holiday hype and courteously listen in on your deep and meaningful monologue, then you can bring in the religion card. Caught in the spirit of ho-ho-ho, even Muslims and Sikhs go on spending sprees and set up emergency Christmas funds. But if you take a step back from that ever-so-charming spirit and go back to the roots of the holiday… most of us aren’t even Christian! We just like the sales, and the ribbons, and tearing up layers of wrapping only to discover your boyfriend doesn’t know you all that well after all.
And most importantly, a philosophical thought worth a PhD thesis is whether all this consumerism is in accord with the Green idea that is so en vogue these days. "Think of all the polar bears that are drowning because of the global warming! Think of the tonnes of excess packaging produced specifically for this environmentally hostile holiday!" - you could say, and pray they be reasonable.
Perhaps, as an ultimate gesture of desperation, to save the planet and to make poverty history, you could buy each one of your friends a copy of the Big Issue: a quality read for them, a big sincere ‘thank you’ for you, and a hot meal for the homeless.
It takes that little for a Christmas to be truly merry.
Wednesday, 28 November 2007
De-Stigmatisaion of the Sex Industry
A thing of a stigma. Ava Caradonna
Ava Caradonna is an awfully smart and determined lady, who has worked as a prostitute for over 4 years now. She began her journey in a brothel in Australia at the age of 23. Here is what she has to say about the stigma:
“There is an incredibly caricatured and clichéd understanding of who works in the sex industry. And that same stigma that is attached to sex workers – as whores, as loose women, as deviants, as drug addicts, as people who basically won’t go and get a 9 to 5 job and be bored for the rest of their life, – a similar stigma is attached to the men and increasingly women who purchase sex”.
The Ginormous White Elephant and The “Ugly” Adverts
The sex industry is a ginormous white elephant that is too awkward for any single force of society to handle.
With a distinctively conservative approach to sex and the role of sex in society, Harriet Harman, Labour’s Minister for Women, believes buying sex should be made a criminal offence, like in Sweden. That was in 2006.
Speaking on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show on October 28 this year, Harman drew links between the "ugly" classified adverts in some local newspapers and human trafficking in the country.
The crusade on the “ugly” and the “vice” speaks of a strong desire to push prostitution out of sight, and preferably – out of mind.
Ava Cardonna, on the opposite end of the spectrum, considers this move a ‘short-sighted, moralistic stab’. “By banning adverts, you are certainly not taking away the reasons why people are involved in prostitution”, she says.
De-criminalisation vs Legalisation
According to the Prostitution Reform website, the use of prostitutes in the UK is believed to have doubled over the last ten years. Times Online also reported a noticeable change in the demographics of clients of prostitution.
However, legal regulations around prostitution still create huge barriers for the safe conduct of sex for money. While selling sex is not illegal in this country, plenty of activities associated with it are heavily penalised.
Advertising sexual services, street prostitution, as well as running brothels with more than one prostitute working in a flat – all are essential yet illegal activities in the UK. The pursuit of street prostitutes from a car, otherwise known as kerb-crawling, is also illegal in most of the UK, with the exception of Scotland.
But importantly, taking away the laws that criminalise sex for money is very different from putting in laws that regulate commercial sex. Ava explains: “Over-regulation of the sex industry is counter-productive. Many people work in the sex industry precisely because they don’t have to pay tax and they don’t have to have immigration status”.
Illegal does not mean non-consensual
Legal measures tackling the negative consequences of prostitution are mostly based on a victim mentality. The Poppy Project, for example, provides support for women who have been trafficked into prostitution.
These women pay huge sums of money (some Thai women reported paying up to £20,000) to illegally enter and remain in the country. They do not need to be rescued or sheltered. For them, this is just an investment. And deportation means loss of investment.
Telling people how to live their lives is counter-productive. Acknowledging that prostitution can be a choice and facilitating people’s choices, on the other hand, could be yet the best way to help.
