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Brazil: Patricia Acioli Assassination Is Intimidating Message From Militias

RIO DE JANEIRO — Judge Patricia Acioli was known for wielding a “heavy hammer,” especially against rogue police who have formed illegal vigilante gangs. She had put more than 60 officers behind bars, most of them for murder. The Rio de Janeiro state judge paid for that fearlessness: Acioli was shot to death in front of her house last month. And all of the 21 bullets that hit her came from a lot issued to police, including some in Sao Goncalo, the city where she worked. While violence and impunity are common in Brazil, the brazen murder of Acioli was an especially heavy blow, a message of intimidation from the vigilante militias. The slaying was “a wound to the lawful state, to democracy; the figure of the judge is a symbol of justice,” said Denise Frossard, a retired judge who presided over some of Rio’s first cases against the militias in the 1990s. “If she is a judge and can be killed, how can a citizen feel secure enough to be a witness?” Acioli’s death was the first murder of a judge in the state’s history, though Frossard herself survived three assassination attempts and had eight security guards ensuring her safety while she was on the bench. Violent militias have grown in power and scope in recent years, taking over poor communities formerly controlled by drug dealers and coercing residents to pay for illegal utility hookups, transportation, and security. Their members include former and current police, firefighters and jail guards. Investigators say they have elected members as state and city legislators. They also have been praised by politicians, including Rio de Janeiro’s mayor, for taking back swaths of territory from drug gangs. A probe by the state legislature in 2008 found militias were connected to execution-style killings, far-reaching extortion schemes, and the kidnapping and torture of a group of journalists investigating the gangs’ activities. Acioli had been repeatedly threatened for taking on the police officers who were part of the gangs, and she had written letters to her superiors requesting protection. One week before her murder, she went to Rio police’s internal affairs office and said she was being threatened by officers from Sao Goncalo, where she worked, and Niteroi, where she lived. The last case on her docket on Aug. 11, the day she died, involved policemen charged with executing an 18-year-old man in a slum. One of her last acts as a judge was to authorize their arrest. A month later, three of the same Sao Goncalo police officers were charged with her murder. The suspects knew the judge would ask for their arrest, and wanted to stop her, said Felipe Ettore, the head of Rio’s homicide division, in a press conference this week. They didn’t know she’d already issued the order. “Their way of stopping her was to kill her,” Ettore said. “They went to court and followed Patricia to her front door.” Nationwide, the lives of 134 judges are currently under threat, according to the National Council for Justice, which oversees the judiciary branch in Brazil. Requests for protection from magistrates jumped 400 percent in the month since Acioli’s death, according to the Brazilian Association of Judges. The killing prompted the United Nations special rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, Gabriela Knaul, to urge Brazilian authorities to protect those charged with enforcing the law. “The assassination of Judge Acioli is evidence of the existence of a pervasive and serious problem regarding the protection of judges in Brazil,” said Knaul, a Brazilian judge herself. Acioli’s caseload was taken on by three other judges. Seven prosecutors are now working with them. “Her death did bring on a fear among prosecutors and judges; they’re human, and it’s natural to think, ‘That could be me tomorrow,’” said Claudio Lopes, Rio state’s attorney general. “But if this was done to intimidate justice, it is backfiring. We will be more rigorous than ever.” The work is not only dangerous, it’s difficult. Militias infiltrate the state from local police departments to state legislatures. They have a particularly nefarious effect on the legal system because they blur the boundaries between legitimate agents of the law and criminals, Lopes said. “They’re often composed of people credentialed by the state to promote public safety, and they turn against the state, against the public,” he said. “They usurp the authority of the state. In this way, they are a danger that goes deeper than drug traffickers.” Even a few years ago, some politicians still praised militias for doing what the state couldn’t do: take on drug dealers entrenched in the city’s shantytowns. Former Rio Mayor Cesar Maia welcomed them as a “lesser evil” and a form of “community self-defense” against drug gangs, according to the newspaper O Globo in 2006. Current Mayor Eduardo Paes praised militias in a July 2008 interview on Globo television, saying they “brought peace to the population” in areas where the state had lost sovereignty to drug lords. Such views are changing as the body count rises. The 2008 investigation led by Marcelo Freixo, head of the state legislature’s human rights commission, led to the arrest of one state representative and six city council members for militia activity. Hundreds were arrested on other charges because of information detailed in the report. One of those arrested, Rio City Councilman Luiz Andre Ferreira da Silva, is accused of plotting to kill the city’s police chief and Freixo. In Sao Goncalo, 34 officers were put on leave after Acioli’s death because they face serious criminal charges such as murder, according to Rio state’s Supreme Court. Arrest warrants have been issued for 28 of them. In spite of the threats to Acioli, court officials had cut her security detail from four to one in 2007, said Tecio Lins e Silva, an attorney representing her family. “This is a matter involving my life, and it is very important,” Acioli wrote in a letter appealing the decision. “I don’t understand the treatment being given to the case.” But the security officers were not reinstated. At the moment she was shot, no one was there to protect her.

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The office of scandalous sexter Anthony Weiner needs to be sanitized—literally. Newly elected congressman Rob Turner’s family was horrified to find the former House member’s toothbrush in his old office bathroom, and ordered a thorough cleaning. “Weiner left his toothbrush behind! It literally says ‘Anthony’ on it,” an insider…

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Scarborough Accuses GOP Debate Audience of ‘Applauding the Death of a Young Man Without Health Insurance’

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough on Friday said the people in the audience at Monday's Republican presidential debate were “applauding the death of a young man without health insurance” and therefore were like the John Birchers “that Bill Buckley kicked out of the conservative movement in the mid-1960s .” Unfortunately, the host of “Morning Joe” has, like so many others in the media, badly misinterpreted what occurred when Texas Congressman Ron Paul was asked what should happen to a voluntarily uninsured man who falls into a coma (video follows with transcript and commentary): JOE SCARBOROUGH, HOST: I was a Tea Party guy before Tea Party was popular. You can look at my thousands of votes from 1995 to 2001, and you will not find anybody, nobody other than maybe Ron Paul, that was more small government than me. You just won't. It is a matter of record – a matter of record. And yet when I was watching the debate the other night and I heard some people applauding the death of a young man without health insurance, or some of the other applause, or quite frankly some of the responses to some things that Rick Perry said that would've got him laughed out of a middle school classroom. I sat there and said who are those people in that room, and where in the hell is my conservative party? Because I will tell you, these people – for the record, America – these are the people that Bill Buckley kicked out of the conservative movement in the mid-1960s . These are the people that he said, the John Birchers , that he said have nothing to do with what I am and what conservatism is. PEGGY NOONAN : So you think the Tea Party now consists of old Birchite folks, or Birchite thinking? SCARBOROUGH: No, I'm not painting that broad brush over the Tea Party movement at all. I think there are elements, though, that our candidates are focusing on too much and they're playing to the lowest common denominator in a way that doom conservatives to make gains next year in a race for the White House. I'm surprised Scarborough has fallen for this liberal, Tea Party-bashing line. Let's go back to what really happened at Monday's debate: WOLF BLITZER , CNN: Before I get to Michele Bachmann, I want to just — you're a physician, Ron Paul, so you're a doctor. You know something about this subject. Let me ask you this hypothetical question. A healthy 30-year-old young man has a good job, makes a good living, but decides, you know what? I'm not going to spend $200 or $300 a month for health insurance because I'm healthy, I don't need it. But something terrible happens, all of a sudden he needs it. Who's going to pay if he goes into a coma, for example? Who pays for that? CONGRESSMAN RON PAUL (R-TEXAS): Well, in a society that you accept welfarism and socialism, he expects the government to take care of him. BLITZER : Well, what do you want? PAUL: But what he should do is whatever he wants to do, and assume responsibility for himself. My advice to him would have a major medical policy, but not be forced — BLITZER : But he doesn't have that. He doesn't have it, and he needs intensive care for six months. Who pays? PAUL: That's what freedom is all about, taking your own risks. [APPLAUSE] This whole idea that you have to prepare and take care of everybody — (APPLAUSE) BLITZER : But Congressman, are you saying that society should just let him die? PAUL: No.

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Lindsey Lowe, Tenn. Mom, Confesses To Smothering Newborn Twins

HENDERSONVILLE, Tenn. — A young mother charged with murder has told police she hid her pregnancy, gave birth to twin sons at her family’s home and killed the infants by smothering their cries so her parents wouldn’t hear them. Police in the Nashville suburb of Hendersonville arrested Lindsey Lowe, 25, on Wednesday after her father discovered one baby’s body in a laundry basket. According to a police affidavit, the young mother said she didn’t tell her family she was pregnant, but believes she got pregnant in January and never visited a doctor. Police said on Thursday they were trying to identify the father of the twins. Police said they interviewed Lowe who said she went into labor Monday evening while on the toilet at her parent’s home. She said the first baby fell into the toilet and began to cry. “Lowe stated that the baby was crying and Lowe did not want her parents to hear and find out about the child,” police wrote in the affidavit. “Lowe stated that she put her hand over the child’s mouth and she stated that she kept it there until the child was dead, which was a couple of minutes.” Lowe said she never checked the sex of the child. A few minutes later, the affidavit says, she gave birth to the second child, who also fell in the toilet. She again put her hand over the baby’s mouth and held it there until the baby died, which she said took less time than the first child. She put both babies in the laundry basket and covered them up with blankets. Police said both boys appeared to be full term and weighing about 5 or 6 pounds. Lowe, who works at a pediatric dentist’s office, was charged with first-degree murder and remained in jail Thursday with no bond. Police said she is undergoing a medical evaluation. Police Lt. Scott Ryan said Thursday that he didn’t know how she hid the pregnancy, just saying that she didn’t tell anyone. He would not say whether Lowe was helping them to identify the father. Ryan said women with unwanted pregnancies have several options, including a safe haven law that allows newborns to be dropped off at places like hospitals and police stations. “No matter how bleak the outlook may be for you, let someone help you out,” Ryan said. Someone answered a call by The Associated Press to Lowe’s father but hung up when asked for comment. Senior Pastor at City Road Chapel United Methodist Church Ron Lowery said he got a call from Lowe’s parents on Wednesday to come to the house for support during the police investigation. He said Lindsey and her sister grew up in the church and were regularly involved in youth activities. On Thursday, he said the family was stable and was figuring out what to do next. “It’s amazing how we somehow have the ability to cope even in life’s worst disasters,” Lowery said. As to why Lindsey was so desperate to hide the pregnancy, Lowery said, “It’s a mystery to everybody.”

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Taser inquiry into police incident involving teenager

Stun gun used on 16-year-old Manchester boy after police responded to emergency call from teenager’s mother An inquiry is under way after a Taser gun was used by police on a 16-year-old schoolboy. The weapon was deployed as officers responded to an emergency call from the teenager’s mother. She had dialled 999 after her son locked her out of the family home in Wythenshawe, Manchester, following an argument. The woman reportedly told the officers the age and name of her son. When he came out of the property with his hands out there was a scuffle before the stun gun was used. He was then arrested on suspicion of assaulting two police officers but was later told he would face no charges. His family, who do not wish to be named, want an apology and are considering taking legal action. A spokesman for Greater Manchester police confirmed that after being called to a domestic dispute in Manchester, officers had deployed a Taser while arresting a 16-year-old boy. “He was arrested on suspicion of assaulting two police officers,” the spokesman said. “The Crown Prosecution Service later decided that no further action would be taken. A GMP professional standards branch (PSB) investigation is ongoing into the circumstances surrounding the use of a Taser during the arrest. In line with protocol, it was referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission and the PSB investigation is being supervised by them.” Speaking about the incident, which took place on the afternoon of 30 June, the boy told the Manchester Evening News: “I came out, held my hands up and said: ‘I want to negotiate with my mum’. The next moment they all jumped on me. There was a scuffle and they tried to throw me to the ground but I wouldn’t go down so they tasered me. I didn’t know what was happening.” His mother said to the newspaper: “I thought they would just get him out of the house and take him to his sister’s or something to calm down. I was shocked at the response.” Police Manchester Tasers guardian.co.uk

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This was going to be a relatively quick post about the good news, as announced by the Castle Coalition in a Tuesday press release after being teased a few days earlier by ” Little Pink House ” author Jeff Benedict, that a Lifetime Channel movie is going to be made about the Kelo vs. New London eminent domain drama. Then along came “culture blogger” Alyssa Rosenberg over at the hard-left ThinkProgress .

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Michele Bachmann Meets Her Hero Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s and Begs For Endorsment

enlarge Credit: Tom Tingle/The Arizona Republic There aren’t too many people worse than Sheriff Joe Arpaio. He reminds me of the Dennis Hof from HBO’s Cat House , doesn’t he? He’s a job creator. Michele Bachmann says Arpaio is one of her heroes . Michele Bachmann said she considers Sheriff Joe Arpaio “one of my heroes” in a brief news conference the Republican presidential candidate held before meeting with the 79-year-old sheriff on Wednesday afternoon. Bachmann spent her time with the media – it lasted less than 4 minutes – highlighting her position on immigration and getting Arizonans to understand why she considers the state an important battleground in her efforts to secure the Republican nomination. Bachmann said solving the “border issue” is something that can be done in phases, by first increasing security along the U.S. border with Mexico and then reducing programs, such as in-state tuition for undocumented students, that can entice immigrants to remain in the country without authorization. “I want to solve the border issue,” said Bachmann, a Minnesota congresswoman. “I want to build the fence that needs to be built.” Bachmann also said she wants Arpaio’s support. “He’s a great guy – anyone would want his endorsement,” she said. He sure is great at locking up brown people and detaining them in pseudo internment camps. Poor Gov. Jan Brewer didn’t even warrant a heads up from Michele. Her visit came as a surprise to many in local Republican and conservative circles. “NOT good form when a presidential candidate comes to Arizona and fails to notify the state party or Governor,” Shane Wikfors of the conservative blog Sonoran Alliance said Tuesday night on Twitter. In a follow-up Twitter message, Wikfors expressed dissatisfaction with the Bachmann campaign “for blowing off conservative supporters in AZ tonight!” He did support Mittens last time so I doubt he’ll give her a thumbs up endorsement, but he might giver her a tour of his detention centers.

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Boehner: ‘Hell, No! I’m Not Having Any Fun’

Click here to view this media Following a Thursday speech unveiling his plan to “liberate” the economy, House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) was asked if he enjoyed his job. “Hell, no!” he exclaimed. “I’m not having any fun.” “But I am glad I’m there… I wanted to be Speaker because I wanted to lead an effort on behalf of our country. And it’s that mission that drives me every day… But I like to accomplish my mission and get the hell out of there.” Boehner later added that he never aspired to be a politician. “I always wanted to be a salesman. And eventually that’s what I did. I was in the sales and marketing business in the packaging and plastic industry. And I thought I was going to do that the rest of my life but along the way, I got involved in my neighborhood homeowners association and I ended up in the United States Congress.” UPDATE: John Amato: John Boehner threw down the tea party gauntlet this morning and said it’s his way or the highway in response to Obama’s jobs bill and what the Super Committee will be allowed to do. He dismissed tax breaks for corporations (which is a long standing ideal of conservative policy) and labeled them as gimmicks and then said only federal spending cuts (not the military of course) and attacks on our social safety nets will be permitted to move forward in his vision to help our struggling economy. It’s a destructive philosophy as the facts have bared out and the president must not buckle again to the GOP or the Villagers’ bipartisan shared sacrifice fetish. If he does offer up social safety net reforms that include benefit cuts, the 2012 elections will be a complete disaster .

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Republicans are trying to pass legislation in the House of Representatives that would prevent the National Labor Relations Board from enforcing the law and protecting workers. H.R. 2587 would prevent the NLRB from remedying unfair retaliation against workers by corporations. The bill is a response to a recent punishment handed down to Boeing, who allegedly attempted to move a plant from Washington state to right-to-work state South Carolina after the workers attempted to strike. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka condemned the bill: If a group of workers walk out of a plant because of unsafe working conditions, the company could decide to move the work and the jobs rather than fix the problem, and the NLRB would be powerless to protect the workers and their jobs. If a group of women or African Americans joined together to protest race or sex discrimination by their employer, the company could simply transfer the work somewhere else, and the NLRB would be powerless to protect the workers. Mitt Romney has jumped on board with the legislation and the attacks on the NLRB , calling its members “labor stooges.” Conservatives from the National Federation of Independent Business are launching an online campaign to defend the legislation, with a series of Google ads: The ads take to this propaganda page .

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‘Shaun Ryder in the Happy Mondays wasn’t me. He was a caricature’

The Happy Mondays frontman has survived addiction, attempts on his life and depression. But writing his autobiography has forced him to face up to even more uncomfortable truths about his past. He talks pills, thrills and bellyaches ‘ All right?” says Shaun Ryder without a hint of recognition. I last interviewed him 12 years ago . It was in his dressing room, the Happy Mondays had recently reformed and he’d just had stomach implants to make him vomit if he took drugs. Even so he was off his head. He spent most of the time cackling loudly, patting his hair obsessively (“It’s like a Hovis loaf”), handing bags of dodgy looking stuff to even more dodgy looking geezers, and being in your face. At least he didn’t pull a gun on me, as he did on a journalist from the Manchester Evening News a year later (to be fair, it wasn’t loaded). Our earlier encounter is a total blank to him. Just one of the many incidents or days or months that have been obliterated by overindulgence. This setting couldn’t be more different – posh hotel in upmarket Worsley, Greater Manchester, where premiership footballers play golf and preen their Bentleys. More disconcerting, we are in a tiny office where couples plan their weddings, sitting at a mocked-up table with all the nuptial trimmings. “I, Simon Hattenstone, take you, Shaun William Ryder, to be my lawfully wedded wife.” Well, Ryder and the Happy Mondays always did do a good line in ecstasy-inspired surrealism. They were the apogee of Madchester – a period in 1980s/90s pop music dominated by working-class lads from Manchester (though he always stresses he is a proud Salfordian) who wore baggy clothes, swallowed pills by the bucketload, and had a gift with great tunes. The Happy Mondays mixed jangly rock and house, funk and northern soul and hip-hop to produce an inspired hybrid. The most distinctive feature was Ryder’s hallucinogenic lyrics sung in a voice rough as grit. (“You’re twistin’ my melon man, you know you talk so hip man, you’re twistin’ my melon man” became a classic idiom, roughly translating as “you’re confusing me with your jargon, young man”.) And, of course, there were the album titles – the first from the Mondays was called Squirrel And G-Man Twenty Four Hour Party People Plastic Face Carnt Smile (White Out) . The late music impresario Tony Wilson , who signed the Happy Mondays to Factory records, compared Ryder to Yeats. Today, Ryder has got rid of the Hovis loaf for an old-fashioned suedehead. He’s clean, looks super smart in his check jacket, pink shirt and Patrick Cox loafers, and is so quiet it’s hard to believe he’s the same man. “D’you want me sat?” he asks meekly. He has just written his autobiography and it has forced him to confront many uncomfortable aspects of his life. Yes, he talks about the great times and the fun and the fame, but ultimately what you come away with is the wreckage of crack houses, bankruptcy, car crashes, attempts on his life. As the book progresses, he seems to be slowly, painfully, coming to terms with himself. Ryder rarely makes eye contact. As he talks he stares into the distance or down at his arms, and occasionally looks beseechingly at his manager Warren for help. The thing is, he says, he’s so different from his image. “The Shaun Ryder in the Happy Mondays isn’t the real Shaun Ryder. It’s a caricature. Always has been. We really wanted to be rock’n’roll, so we became rock’n’roll, and really good at it, but you pick up loads of layers and you completely forget who you are and what you are. So it’s just about getting back to being me, and being happy with me.” Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, he could have belonged to either. And there is a hint of the 12-step patter, but it doesn’t come easy to him. In fact, talking full stop doesn’t come easy to him. But the caricature is based on you? “Exactly, it’s a stretched, warped version of you.” Ryder says the music game’s changed now – these days, thanks to The X Factor , everybody wants reality, whereas in the past it was the opposite. “When I got in it was like you invented this character … it was like Alice Cooper, he took off his wigs and put back on his business suit.” The problem with Ryder is that he didn’t have a business suit – and even if he had had, he would have been too wrecked to put it on. Does he think it was good for him to escape the real Ryder? “Phooo!” He puffs his cheeks out. “Bit of both, really. Good and bad, really … what do I say here, what do I say about that … I don’t know.” He looks to Warren, and says he was actually shy and nervy. The thought of performing scared him? “Oh God, yeah, I was certainly frightened of going on stage. One of the ways to get over it was to be smashed. I deal with it a lot better now.” It’s hard to think of the gobby, aggressive vocalist as mouselike. You’re a weird mix, aren’t you? “Yeah. Yeah, proper odd mix. And for a front man, a lead singer, you’ve got to be extrovert. I’m proper schizophrenic – really, really, really shy, but also a bit of a loon.” Ryder says that from the age of 11 he didn’t learn a thing at school. By 15 he was working in Salford as a brickie, followed by a short stint as a postie, then it was music all the way. Actually, that’s not quite right. The music seemed to play second fiddle to the drugs. The way he tells it he pretty much introduced ecstasy to Britain. Even when the band was successful, he was still dealing. When the Happy Mondays split up, he went on to form another group, Black Grape. Then it was back to the Mondays again, but now he says that’s all over and it’s his solo career he’s focused on. Last year Ryder featured in the reality show I’m A Celebrity … Get Me Out Of Here . For many stars, signing up to the show is a measure of how far they’ve fallen; for Ryder it was a measure of how high he had risen after those years in the gutter. He ate crocodile penis, was bitten by a snake, frequently flashed his new set of pearly teeth and showed a sweet and sensible side that surprised many of us. His nadir came just before I met him in 1999 when he found himself renting a house in Burnley, wasted on crack. After falling out with his management team, William and Gloria Nicholl, and failing to pay them, his income was confiscated by receivers for 11 years. “Terrible time,” he says. “God, yeah, terrible.” It was his current wife Joanne who helped him clean up – chemically and financially. They had known each other throughout childhood, and finally got together in 2005. By then he already had three children with three women (including Donovan’s daughter Oriole) and she had a child. Now they have two young girls together, Lulu and Pearl. Does he wish they hadn’t left it so late? No, he says, it would have been disastrous in the debauched years. It wasn’t just the drugs; at the height of his infamy he was pathologically promiscuous. “She wouldn’t have even gone near me back in the day.” Does he blame her? “No, not at all.” Would he have gone near himself back then? “No, certainly not. I wouldn’t have gone near me from when the Happy Mondays first started. A young kid getting into deals, sex, drugs and rock’n’roll. No. I’m actually glad Joanne didn’t go anywhere near me because it would have ruined a relationship.” And ruined her? “She’d have probably cut me throat when I was asleep,” he says with a straight face. “Most definitely. I wouldn’t be alive now. She would have cut me throat without a word of a lie.” Because of the shagging? “The shagging, yeah. Definitely. She would be serving time in prison.” At times his behaviour has been horrendous. In a television tribute to Tony Wilson, filmed in 2008, he responded to a woman who had accused him of plagiarism, “You’re fucking dead, bitch. You’re getting fucking battered and fucking raped.” The footage was not included in the final programme. Does he think he became a monster? “Yeah, course there was a monstrous idiot side. I suppose I have been a cunt. I know I have …” He pauses. “But I’ve always tried to be fair.” It’s the thing Ryder often returns to – his innate sense of justice. The Mondays shared song royalties, even though he did the bulk of the writing. Despite that, he says, the rest of the band weren’t happy. One by one he fell out with them. He recently saw his brother Paul, who played bass with the band, at a wedding, and they nodded to each other – something of a reconciliation. The trouble is, he says, they haven’t moved on. “They’ve had a long time to think and they’re still in that mindset – they was right.” He talks about the plots to replace him, the complaints that he was holding the others back. “I was criticised all the way through the Mondays for my shit songs. They’d say, ‘Why can’t you write songs like the Stone Roses?’ Well, if I was writing songs like fucking Ian Brown we wouldn’t be anywhere because the Roses are doing it.” When researching the book, he revisited old haunts, clubs and pubs, decades on, and found the same junkies arguing about the same things they had been 20 years ago. “When you are taking copious amounts of drugs, you don’t really change from when you started taking them, at 18 or whatever, you don’t change. You could be 30 or 40, but you’re still the same you were when you started taking them.” And then when you do stop, he says, there’s a hell of a lot of catching up to do. “It’s like this fast forwarding. Vroooom! And suddenly you’re grown up.” Is that scary? “You’ve got to make decisions, you’ve got responsibilities. I’ve got kids in my 20s. It’s deep. Deep.” He looks to Warren for help. Which drug caused him the biggest problem? “Oh, the whole fucking lot of it really. I mean … oof …” He sounds as if he’s just landed one on his own jaw. “I suppose more than anything it was just me that caused myself the problems. Although drugs are bad, I’ve always managed to make things difficult for myself.” If he met his younger self today what advice would he give him? It turns out to concern his former managers: “I’d say, “Pay the Nicholls’s 130 grand. Save yourself a lot of ball ache.” When you’re a young rebellious kid, you think you can beat the system, and when you grow up you realise you can’t.” What system? “You know, just like by paying for things.” Did it take him ages to realise that? “Yeah, it took till I was about 40 years old.” The thing is, he says, he had been offered work throughout this period, either gigging or TV shows, but it was pointless taking it because anything he earned would be taken from him. “Trying to get out of that with a bunch of receivers who are making millions; they don’t want to give you your income back. It took fucking five years to get these cunts … these are bad, bad bastards. I’m sorry for swearing, but these are fucking naughty people on the gravy train. I was offered a hell of a lot of TV, but I couldn’t do it because all the money would have gone to them, plus you’ve got people parking outside your house, and you’re being followed.” He stops and smiles. “I mean it hasn’t turned me into someone who’s eaten up inside, that’s not what I’m like.” Anyway, he’s got nothing to be eaten up about now. He says he loves being nearly 50, being a father to young kids again, being woken up at six every morning. In so many ways, he’s been lucky. Even with the teeth, which he says were ravaged more by crack than smack. An old Mondays fan promised him when he was a dental student that if he qualified he’d do him a brand new set on the cheap, and was as good as his word. Now he says he can do all sorts of impressions for the girls with his new gnashers, and he shows off a burgeoning talent for ventriloquism. He hardly goes out these days – can’t be bothered, and there’s too much going on with the family. And when he does there are too many reminders of the old days. “You still get all the old crowd who want to take you off somewhere, and ‘Go on, have some of this.’” They offer him drugs? “Oh God, yeah, I could be in the middle of Asda … there are a lot of coked-up shoppers around, aren’t there? You get young kids, 18-year-olds, offering me drugs.” What does he say to them? “I just laugh. I just think, Would they do that to their dad?” What’s the most surprising thing he has discovered about himself in writing the book? Silence. “I should know the answer to this, shouldn’t I? It’s like people who say, Are you surprised you’re still alive? No.” He’s still thinking about it. “Drugs shut you down. Years later, you find yourself tripping off about things that just didn’t faze you at the time.” What like? “Deaths of family members and friends that didn’t even touch you. Drugs cut you off emotionally, don’t they?” The best thing about life now, he says, is feeling it. “You think being off your tits makes life easier, but you know what? It’s a lot easier when you’re not.” As we finish, he wipes his forehead. “That was more exhausting than the book was.” You don’t like interviews, do you? “Ones for the Daily Star and the Sun are OK – you know, tits, fannies and all that. But just speaking generally makes me feel uneasy.” Is talking to people part of his learning process? “Oh God, yeah, cos I’m not really sociable. Are we dusted? Great. Heh heh! Put me out of my misery.” Shaun Ryder Happy Mondays Celebrity Simon Hattenstone guardian.co.uk

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