Players could enter court to a fanfare under organisers’ plans to distinguish Olympic tennis from 2012 Wimbledon tournament Its historic, manicured grounds are more accustomed to the sound of rippling applause and enthusiastic, if decorous, shouts of “Come on Andy!” But on 28 July next year, when the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club becomes the home, for two weeks, of Olympic tennis, the courts of SW19 could find themselves echoing to We Are the Champions by Queen or Tina Turner’s Simply the Best. Under plans being considered by Locog, the 2012 Olympics organising committee, players – dressed, of course, in national colours rather than “predominantly white” – could enter the courts to rousing tunes of their choice, creating arguably the rowdiest atmosphere seen at Wimbledon in its 125-year history. It is part of a strategy to differentiate Olympic tennis from the 2012 Wimbledon championships, which will have concluded just 20 days earlier. “What we don’t want is to come here and everyone say this is Wimbledon part two a few weeks later,” said Debbie Jevans, 2012′s director of sports and venues. “The championships have their unique look, a unique feel. Everything about them is completely identified with Wimbledon. “When it comes to 2012, we want the look and feel to be distinctive.” The All England Club’s distinctive livery of purple and green – reflected even in the planting of the flowerbeds at Wimbledon – will be replaced with hoardings and branding in as yet unconfirmed Olympic colours, said Jevans. She acknowledged, however, that “there are some things you can’t change: the grass is green”. More than 100 Locog staff have been on site during the championships, shadowing All England Club personnel in preparation for the wholesale handover next year. Aside from a tiny number of key personnel – including the head groundsman, Eddie Seward, who plans to resow the courts between the two events with specially pre-germinated grass seed to ensure they are pristine for the Olympics – almost all staff, from catering to security to ticketing, will be new to Wimbledon. There will be a new entrance during the Olympics, at the southern end of the site where the corporate marquees are erected, but with a much smaller programme of events: only 10 courts will be used compared with the 19 during the regular championships, and the visitor numbers will be around half. What is essentially a dry run during Wimbledon 2011 is the first of a rolling programme of test events designed to prepare the venues that will host the Games next summer. A comprehensive 12-month testing programme will cover 42 events across 26 venues and involve 8,000 athletes from more than 50 countries. Among the more high-profile test events are beach volleyball at Horse Guard’s Parade in August and basketball games in a dedicated temporary arena on the Olympic Park, for which spectators will be bussed in and out of what is essentially still a building site. The first big public test will be eventing (dressage, show-jumping and cross-country) at Greenwich Park, which takes place at the beginning of July. Tickets for the equestrian events will be given away to local residents, some of whom have been critical of the need to close the park during the Games. A total of 150,000 tickets costing between £5 and £35 will be on sale for several events, although others, such as the London–Surrey Cycle Classic to test the road race route, will be free. For spectators, perhaps the biggest difference for the Olympics at Wimbledon will be the absence of queueing, which gives even ticketless fans a chance to watch Centre Court matches if they are prepared to wait long enough. All tickets for Olympic tennis will be sold in advance. Jevans said she was examining Wimbledon’s system whereby departing spectators hand in show-court tickets for resale to ground ticket-holders. Separately, however, Olympics organisers have confirmed they are considering a similar scheme for the Olympic Park. They want to avoid the empty seats that embarrassed organisers in Beijing. The architects of the park are also studying the ambience on Wimbledon’s Murray Mound for landscaping ideas. They hope people will remain in the park to eat, drink and watch the action on big screens so that they can regulate the crowds and create atmosphere. The use of music might break Wimbledon’s hallowed traditions, but it is not entirely new. Some tennis tournaments, including the US Open and the ATP finals at the O2, already use amplified music to build atmosphere. At Flushing Meadows signature tunes are played as the players emerge and also at each change of ends. And if a particular celebrity is in the crowd, they are often greeted with a relevant burst of music, and shown on the big screen. Olympic Games 2012 Olympics 2012: Tennis Wimbledon Tennis Owen Gibson Esther Addley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Afghanistan’s interior ministry says girl died in blast after insurgents gave her a bag containing explosives Taliban insurgents used an eight-year-old girl carrying a bag of explosives to attack a police checkpost in central Afghanistan, the Afghan government said on Sunday, making her one of the youngest child bombers of the decade-old conflict. The incident took place in Char Chino district of central Uruzgan province, the interior ministry said. “The insurgents handed over a bag with a homemade bomb to an eight-year-old girl and asked her to take it to police forces,” it added. “As the girl was getting close to the police, it exploded and killed the girl.” It was the latest in a string of unusual attacks on both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. On Saturday a Taliban car bomber attacked a hospital in a remote district of eastern Logar province, damaging the maternity ward and killing between 20 and 35 people, according to reports. Around the same time in north-western Pakistan, the Pakistani Taliban deployed a married couple who attacked a police station by blowing themselves up. Two burqa-clad figures made their way into a police station in Kolachi, near the Taliban hub of South Waziristan, pretending to want to lodge a complaint, police said. Once inside they opened fire with guns and grenades, capturing hostages and triggering a five-hour siege that left 10 people dead. “This shows how much we hate Pakistani security institutions,” Pakistani Taliban spokesman Ahsanullah Ahsan told Associated Press by telephone. Both the Afghan and Pakistani Taliban have frequently used men disguised under burqas to mount suicide attacks but the use of women is rare. The first genuine instance in Pakistan is believed to have occurred in Bajaur tribal agency late last year, when a female suicide bomber wearing a burqa attacked a UN food distribution centre, killing 45 people. Last week in Dir district in north-western Pakistan, police defused a bomb strapped to a nine-year-old girl who said she had been kidnapped in Peshawar then set off walking towards a checkpost. “They told me: ‘You keep on reciting Qu’ranic verses till you push the button’,” she said afterwards. In Afghanistan, the Taliban have denied using child bombers, suggesting increased sensitivity to public opinion as peace talks with the US government loom. The insurgency’s conventional attacks are proving deadlier than ever. Four Nato soldiers were killed at the weekend, including two from Spain, while civilian casualties reached a decade-long high last May. The violence comes days after Barack Obama announced plans to withdraw 33,000 American troops by September 2012, and undermines his claims to have militants “on the run”. The relentless Taliban assaults are fraying nerves among ordinary Afghans as Nato prepares to transfer control of five urban centres, including most of Kabul, and two provinces next month. Afghanistan Taliban Global terrorism Pakistan Declan Walsh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …As the First Lady and her daughters toured Africa last week, Americans were treated to puff piece after piece from their adoring fans in the press. One such aired on ABC's “This Week” Sunday with David Muir actually saying, “Will some of that deeply felt criticism in Africa melt under the glow cast by Mrs. Obama and her girls?” (video follows with transcript and commentary): DAVID MUIR, ABC NEWS: There are many who wonder if Mrs. Obama’s visit will help soothe criticism that her husband has not done enough to reach out to Africa. Critics point out just one visit while in office. Some argue the HIV/AIDS effort was stronger under the Bush administration. But the Obama White House argues it has laid out a plan for Africa combating hunger and widening public health outreach beyond HIV. The question now: will some of that deeply felt criticism in Africa melt under the glow cast by Mrs. Obama and her girls who came here to spread their own message that there is still work to be done. Yes, that's all ailing and starving Africans need to make their troubles go away: a little of Michelle's glow. After all, the Obamas are a magic elixir that wash all of the world's problems away – except, of course, rising unemployment, ballooning gas prices, spiraling food costs, and plummeting home prices. But other than that…
Continue reading …Authorities delay giving go-ahead to talks between more than 150 intellectuals and activists in Damascus Plans for the first open opposition meeting in Damascus for more than a decade are in jeopardy, with Syrian authorities yet to give permission for the gathering to go ahead. More than 150 intellectuals and activists were planning to meet in a hotel in downtown Damascus on Monday in what had initially been seen as a sign that the troubled regime was prepared to cede part of its absolute control in the country’s affairs and allow some organised political dissent. Some opposition figures refused to attend, fearing that any sanctioned meeting in the midst of a brutal crackdown on the four-month uprising would be used by the government to establish new credentials for openness without actually committing to widespread reform. International pressure on the regime to give ground to demonstrators who continue to take to the streets of Syria’s towns and cities remains intense, despite Damascus insisting at the weekend that frequent outbursts of deadly violence across the country were being caused by a large foreign-backed gang that is outmanoeuvring its formidable military. Some foreign reporters have been allowed to enter Syria, although most are working with government minders and do not have freedom to move around the country. President Bashar al-Assad said last week he had met some opposition members and citizens who had presented grievances he described as “legitimate”. Maan Abdul Salam, an activist in Damascus, said: “The street has opened a space for us and we plan to claim back political life, which has been underground for years. We need to have an open discussion about what is happening in the country and not focus on what the government is saying.” Monday’s scheduled meeting is due to involve veteran figures including Michel Kilo and Aref Dalila, both of whom met government emissaries last month but have refused further meetings while the killing continues. Those who are refusing to attend cite the possible presence of pro-regime intellectuals, the lack of young activists and the ongoing denial of the crisis by Syrian officials. They fear the government will present the conference as a dialogue or tosuggest that it is allowing freedom of association. “This is not the environment to hold a conference,” said veteran intellectual Fawaz Tello. “The government still won’t admit there is a conflict going on.” Tensions with Turkey continue to run high after reports said Syrian troops moved into Najia on the northern border late on Saturday night. Almost 12,000 Syrians have crossed into Turkey but state media agency Sana reported 730 people had returned to the town of Jisr al-Shughour. Activists reported: • Arrests were continuing in Barzeh, close to Damascus, Idleb and Homs, • Students have protested in the northern town of Deir Ezzor. • Refugees were heading to Lebanon as troops moved into the town of Kseer, close to the Lebanese border. • Kisweh, close to Damascus, had a heavy security and army presence around it. • Five people were killed at funerals in Homs on Saturday. Small demonstrations now take place every day, in defiance of the regime’s call for people to stay at home, but most are peaceful. However, there are rising fears of sectarianism, protesters fighting back and of groups taking advantage of the protests, all of which would play into the government’s narrative that the uprising is being manipulated by outsiders. Other activists said they backed the conference, even if they would not be attending. “Any future opposition must include the local co-ordination committees,” said one young activist, referring to a grassroots network that is becoming increasingly organised. “But they are trying to break a taboo that the opposition can meet in Syria and that is positive.” In an interview this weekend with CNN, which has been allowed into Damascus, deputy foreign minister Faisal Mikdad again denied there was a crackdown and blamed violence on gangs. The “national dialogue” talked about by Assad in last Monday’s speech has not yet been convened. Most opposition figures have rejected the dialogue, in which 100 people will be picked by the government to participate, insisting the crackdown must end first. Nidaa Hassan is the pseudonym of a reporter working in Damascus Syria Middle East Bashar Al-Assad Nidaa Hassan Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann (R-MN) said Sunday that it was “insulting” for a Fox News host to ask if she was a “flake.” “I am very serious about what I want to do,” Bachmann told Fox News’ Chris Wallace. “People recognize that I’m serious.” “You say that people saw in the debate, saw you as a serious person,” Wallace noted. “I don’t have to tell you that you have — that the rap on you in Washington is you have a history of questionable statements, some would say gaffes — talking about anti-America members of Congress, to on this show a couple of months ago when you suggested that NATO airstrikes have killed up to 30,000 civilians. Are you a flake?” “Well, I think that would be insulting to say something like that because I’m a serious person,” Bachmann replied. “What I would say is that I am 55 years old. I’ve been married 33 years. I’m not only a lawyer, I have a post doctorate degree in federal tax law from William and Mary. I worked in serious scholarship and in work in federal tax court. We raised five kids. We’ve raised 23 foster children. We applied ourselves to education reform. We started a charter school for at-risk kids. I’ve also been a state senator and member of the United states Congress for five years. I’ve been very active in our business, as a job creator. I understand job creation. But also I’ve been leading actively the movement in Washington D.C., with those who are affiliated with fiscal reform.” “Do you recognize that now that you are in the spotlight in a way that you weren’t before, you have to be careful and not say what some regard as flaky things?” Wallace asked. “Well, of course, a person has to be careful with statements that they make. I think that is true. I think now that there will be an opportunity to speak fully on the issues. I look forward to that,” Bachmann concluded. “This doesn’t really get at the issue of Bachmann’s zero major legislative accomplishments,” Politico’s Alexander Burns observed , “but it does offer at least a hint of how she’ll parry some of the more obviously skeptical, process-oriented questions about her preparedness for the campaign.” Update: Wallace has caved under the pressure of letters from angry viewers and apologized for suggesting Bachmann was a “flake.” “I messed up. I’m sorry. I didn’t mean any disrespect,” he said. Watch the latest video at video.foxnews.com
Continue reading …Forget the mud, the toilets and the crowds. Glastonbury first-timer Tim Dowling’s biggest challenge was to get a gig. But who would invite him on stage? Step forward Billy Bragg . . . On the train I tell myself I won’t write about the mud. There’s always mud, I think, and everyone always writes about it. Let’s just say the going is extremely soft, even liquid. The ground sucks at your boots when you walk and, once you’ve crossed a few hundred metres of it, it sucks at your soul a little, too. When people talk about Glastonbury in terms of numbers, the scale of it can be hard to fathom. I can’t really picture 137,000 people, or imagine the throughput of the 3,200 toilets laid on to accommodate them. But there is one statistic that struck me with a certain force: over the three days no fewer than 2,200 acts were scheduled to perform. Whether anyone watched them or not, several thousand people will be able to say they played Glastonbury 2011. And when I turn up early on Saturday morning, I mean to be one of them. I am going to play the banjo at Glastonbury. Finding someone to play with proves more challenging. Despite some cajoling from the Guardian music desk, Noah and the Whale do not wish to be associated with, or photographed anywhere near, a banjo. Instead I manage to book a brief jam session with Fisherman’s Friends , a sea-shanty group from Cornwall, under a giant giraffe. I can’t see why an a cappella group would need banjo accompaniment, but I am not in a position to be choosy. Unfortunately they are, and I’m left standing under the giraffe by myself. Later they reschedule for 6pm. I am obliged to strike out on my own. Although I would like to claim toting a banjo around a huge muddy festival as an additional hardship, I can’t. Everybody’s carrying stuff. Parents are happily hauling pushchairs through the mire. People are walking around the site in wedding dresses. I pass a man wearing butterfly wings, Spock ears, a purple feather fascinator and a high-visibility vest. I decide the Stone Circle – a sort of catch-all spiritual focal point on a rise at the southern edge of the site – might be a good place to kick off my Glastonbury career, but it soon becomes clear that anyone seeking to draw attention to themselves in the circle faces impressive competition. I climb up on one of the stones and play for a bit, but no one comes near. Some festival-goers appear to be attempting to commune with the other stones, either by leaning against them or laying on hands. On the stone directly opposite four people dressed as Teletubbies are having their picture taken. Around the campfire at the centre of the circle all one hears is a series of sharp staccato gusts, as balloons are filled with nitrous oxide and sold to punters by enterprising, red-faced men. It’s sort of peaceful. After about 20 minutes a small child with a painted face clambers up on the stone beside me and listens while I play. “How many Glastonburys have you been to?” I say, trying to make small talk. “Six,” he says. I notice he has something written on his forearm. “It’s my first one,” I say. “What’s that written on your arm?” He grabs hold of his wrist and reads it out carefully. “Please. Return. This. Child. To . . .” I have to go, because I’m appearing with Billy Bragg , who has graciously consented to let me play a song with him in his regular 3pm slot, Bill’s Big Roundup, on the Left Field stage. “The song is called Way Down Yonder in the Minor Key,” he told me when I spoke to him on the phone the previous Thursday. “But don’t listen to the recording, because I don’t play it that way any more. You need to find the version I play live. Your best bet is a YouTube clip from a Canadian children’s programme called Peggy’s Cove , where I’m singing it to a puppet lobster.” “OK,” I said. “It might have been a crab, I don’t know,” he added. It was a lobster. After watching the clip several dozen times, I think I’ve memorised the chords, as well as all the lobster’s lines, but as I approach the backstage area behind the Left Field tent, my hands are shaking. I once drove hours hours through a blizzard to see Billy Bragg play, and the prospect of meeting him would be very exciting were it not alloyed with a sense of impending doom. He pulls his guitar out of his case and talks me through the song’s basic structure. It’s simple enough, but I get a bit lost in the run-through. “The thing is, Tim, I’m a bit like you,” he says. “Not much of a musician.” I pause to admire the way he has welded a charming bit of self-deprecation to an insult so neatly that at first I mistake the whole thing for a compliment. During our brief rehearsal I never once play the song right. I wait backstage while Bragg begins his show, which immediately follows a debate on the future of green employment. Onstage with him are Emmy the Great and singer-songwriter Leon Walker, late of Dartmoor prison, who Billy met though his campaign to provide musical instruments to offenders, Jail Guitar Doors. I am, in every possible sense, out of my depth. After their third song I get introduced, I walk out, I sit down and, well, I’m afraid I don’t remember too much after that. I’m pretty certain I missed the passing A chord in the first chorus (I’ve always assumed that “passing” is in its musical sense more or less synonymous with “optional”) because every time it came around again Bragg turned and gave me a quick, hard stare to make sure I didn’t forget again. Later I also recall something Bragg said to Leon about me just before we went on. “We’re treating him as a musician today, not a journalist,” he said, sounding as if he’d only just decided it. “Bring him in gently, he’s one of us.” I’ll take that – if I never play Glastonbury again, I can be content with the memory of Billy Bragg’s extreme generosity. Which is just as well, because the Fisherman’s Friends cancel our six o’clock. I am left to wander the site. In the Craft Field I see a stall where people are taught how to build ovens out of cob, an ancient, handmade clay-and-straw building material. This strikes me as odd, since the whole festival already seems like a giant machine for churning straw into wet clay with the feet. We’re all making cob, hundreds of acres of it, smooth and oven-ready. In a dystopian urban mockup called Shangri-La, I am suddenly surrounded by nurses in platinum blond wigs, who prod me and look into my eyes. They tell me I have a virus. They recommend tequila. I realise I haven’t seen much music. I slog over to see Pulp at the Park stage, where the mud is so sticky that to stand still is to risk permanent cementation. As the sun sets the woman next to me offers me something brown and homemade from a lemonade bottle. “What is it?” I say. “After Eight vodka,” she says. “Oh, no thank you,” I say. There is a long pause while we listen to Pulp. “So what do you do?” I say. “Just crush up After Eight mints with vodka?” “No, I melt them,” she says. “Actually, I think I’d better have some of that.” This begins a chain of events that I could probably summarise as more drinks. My legs turn to lead. I watch Coldplay’s set on a hospitality bar telly. Glastonbury runs on a 24-hour clock, but I do not. I find myself listening to people who are drinking whisky at 2.30am complain of being defeated by tiredness. I decide it’s time to find my tent while I still can. It sits directly under a guard tower – tower R2 – where a watchman’s walkie talkie brings news from around the festival all night. “We have a very distressed individual wishing to leave the site,” it chirps at 4am. This makes it hard to sleep, but I find it reassuring to know that if I become distressed in the night – a distinct possibility – I need only shout up to him. The next morning the sun has dried the mud into leathery lumps and rolls. At midday I wander off to the Pyramid stage – my first visit – to see the Low Anthem . At this hour it’s easy to get to the front of the stage, where security guards are handing out cups of water. I notice the Low Anthem has a banjo onstage. That’s at least two banjos, out of just 2,200 performers. I think I smell a trend. Glastonbury 2011 Billy Bragg Festivals Tim Dowling guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Forget the mud, the toilets and the crowds. Glastonbury first-timer Tim Dowling’s biggest challenge was to get a gig. But who would invite him on stage? Step forward Billy Bragg . . . On the train I tell myself I won’t write about the mud. There’s always mud, I think, and everyone always writes about it. Let’s just say the going is extremely soft, even liquid. The ground sucks at your boots when you walk and, once you’ve crossed a few hundred metres of it, it sucks at your soul a little, too. When people talk about Glastonbury in terms of numbers, the scale of it can be hard to fathom. I can’t really picture 137,000 people, or imagine the throughput of the 3,200 toilets laid on to accommodate them. But there is one statistic that struck me with a certain force: over the three days no fewer than 2,200 acts were scheduled to perform. Whether anyone watched them or not, several thousand people will be able to say they played Glastonbury 2011. And when I turn up early on Saturday morning, I mean to be one of them. I am going to play the banjo at Glastonbury. Finding someone to play with proves more challenging. Despite some cajoling from the Guardian music desk, Noah and the Whale do not wish to be associated with, or photographed anywhere near, a banjo. Instead I manage to book a brief jam session with Fisherman’s Friends , a sea-shanty group from Cornwall, under a giant giraffe. I can’t see why an a cappella group would need banjo accompaniment, but I am not in a position to be choosy. Unfortunately they are, and I’m left standing under the giraffe by myself. Later they reschedule for 6pm. I am obliged to strike out on my own. Although I would like to claim toting a banjo around a huge muddy festival as an additional hardship, I can’t. Everybody’s carrying stuff. Parents are happily hauling pushchairs through the mire. People are walking around the site in wedding dresses. I pass a man wearing butterfly wings, Spock ears, a purple feather fascinator and a high-visibility vest. I decide the Stone Circle – a sort of catch-all spiritual focal point on a rise at the southern edge of the site – might be a good place to kick off my Glastonbury career, but it soon becomes clear that anyone seeking to draw attention to themselves in the circle faces impressive competition. I climb up on one of the stones and play for a bit, but no one comes near. Some festival-goers appear to be attempting to commune with the other stones, either by leaning against them or laying on hands. On the stone directly opposite four people dressed as Teletubbies are having their picture taken. Around the campfire at the centre of the circle all one hears is a series of sharp staccato gusts, as balloons are filled with nitrous oxide and sold to punters by enterprising, red-faced men. It’s sort of peaceful. After about 20 minutes a small child with a painted face clambers up on the stone beside me and listens while I play. “How many Glastonburys have you been to?” I say, trying to make small talk. “Six,” he says. I notice he has something written on his forearm. “It’s my first one,” I say. “What’s that written on your arm?” He grabs hold of his wrist and reads it out carefully. “Please. Return. This. Child. To . . .” I have to go, because I’m appearing with Billy Bragg , who has graciously consented to let me play a song with him in his regular 3pm slot, Bill’s Big Roundup, on the Left Field stage. “The song is called Way Down Yonder in the Minor Key,” he told me when I spoke to him on the phone the previous Thursday. “But don’t listen to the recording, because I don’t play it that way any more. You need to find the version I play live. Your best bet is a YouTube clip from a Canadian children’s programme called Peggy’s Cove , where I’m singing it to a puppet lobster.” “OK,” I said. “It might have been a crab, I don’t know,” he added. It was a lobster. After watching the clip several dozen times, I think I’ve memorised the chords, as well as all the lobster’s lines, but as I approach the backstage area behind the Left Field tent, my hands are shaking. I once drove hours hours through a blizzard to see Billy Bragg play, and the prospect of meeting him would be very exciting were it not alloyed with a sense of impending doom. He pulls his guitar out of his case and talks me through the song’s basic structure. It’s simple enough, but I get a bit lost in the run-through. “The thing is, Tim, I’m a bit like you,” he says. “Not much of a musician.” I pause to admire the way he has welded a charming bit of self-deprecation to an insult so neatly that at first I mistake the whole thing for a compliment. During our brief rehearsal I never once play the song right. I wait backstage while Bragg begins his show, which immediately follows a debate on the future of green employment. Onstage with him are Emmy the Great and singer-songwriter Leon Walker, late of Dartmoor prison, who Billy met though his campaign to provide musical instruments to offenders, Jail Guitar Doors. I am, in every possible sense, out of my depth. After their third song I get introduced, I walk out, I sit down and, well, I’m afraid I don’t remember too much after that. I’m pretty certain I missed the passing A chord in the first chorus (I’ve always assumed that “passing” is in its musical sense more or less synonymous with “optional”) because every time it came around again Bragg turned and gave me a quick, hard stare to make sure I didn’t forget again. Later I also recall something Bragg said to Leon about me just before we went on. “We’re treating him as a musician today, not a journalist,” he said, sounding as if he’d only just decided it. “Bring him in gently, he’s one of us.” I’ll take that – if I never play Glastonbury again, I can be content with the memory of Billy Bragg’s extreme generosity. Which is just as well, because the Fisherman’s Friends cancel our six o’clock. I am left to wander the site. In the Craft Field I see a stall where people are taught how to build ovens out of cob, an ancient, handmade clay-and-straw building material. This strikes me as odd, since the whole festival already seems like a giant machine for churning straw into wet clay with the feet. We’re all making cob, hundreds of acres of it, smooth and oven-ready. In a dystopian urban mockup called Shangri-La, I am suddenly surrounded by nurses in platinum blond wigs, who prod me and look into my eyes. They tell me I have a virus. They recommend tequila. I realise I haven’t seen much music. I slog over to see Pulp at the Park stage, where the mud is so sticky that to stand still is to risk permanent cementation. As the sun sets the woman next to me offers me something brown and homemade from a lemonade bottle. “What is it?” I say. “After Eight vodka,” she says. “Oh, no thank you,” I say. There is a long pause while we listen to Pulp. “So what do you do?” I say. “Just crush up After Eight mints with vodka?” “No, I melt them,” she says. “Actually, I think I’d better have some of that.” This begins a chain of events that I could probably summarise as more drinks. My legs turn to lead. I watch Coldplay’s set on a hospitality bar telly. Glastonbury runs on a 24-hour clock, but I do not. I find myself listening to people who are drinking whisky at 2.30am complain of being defeated by tiredness. I decide it’s time to find my tent while I still can. It sits directly under a guard tower – tower R2 – where a watchman’s walkie talkie brings news from around the festival all night. “We have a very distressed individual wishing to leave the site,” it chirps at 4am. This makes it hard to sleep, but I find it reassuring to know that if I become distressed in the night – a distinct possibility – I need only shout up to him. The next morning the sun has dried the mud into leathery lumps and rolls. At midday I wander off to the Pyramid stage – my first visit – to see the Low Anthem . At this hour it’s easy to get to the front of the stage, where security guards are handing out cups of water. I notice the Low Anthem has a banjo onstage. That’s at least two banjos, out of just 2,200 performers. I think I smell a trend. Glastonbury 2011 Billy Bragg Festivals Tim Dowling guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Understanding what’s really going on in Greece is key to understanding austerity measures worldwide, and this article by Michael Hudson is the clearest explanation I’ve seen yet. (If you haven’t been following it, leftists are rooting for Greece to default, just like Iceland did, to stop banker demands for governments to cover their losses for their reckless and even criminal activities.) Go read the whole thing: My friend David Kelley likes to cite Molly Ivins’ quip: “It’s hard to convince people that you are killing them for their own good.” The EU’s attempt to do this didn’t succeed in Iceland. And like the Icelanders, the Greek protesters have had their fill of neoliberal learned ignorance that austerity, unemployment and shrinking markets are the path to prosperity, not deeper poverty. So we must ask what motivates central banks to promote tunnel-visioned managers who follow the orders and logic of a system that imposes needless suffering and waste —all to pursue the banal obsession that banks must not lose money? One must conclude that the EU’s new central planners (isn’t that what Hayek said was the Road to Serfdom?) are acting as class warriors by demanding that all losses are to be suffered by economies imposing debt deflation and permitting creditors to grab assets —as if this won’t make the problem worse. This ECB hard line is backed by U.S. Treasury Secretary Geithner, evidently so that U.S. institutions not lose their bets on derivative plays they have written up. This is a repeat of Mr. Geithner’s intervention to prevent Irish debt alleviation. The result is that we enter absurdist territory when the ECB and Treasury insist on “voluntary renegotiation” on the ground that some banks may have taken an AIG-type gamble in offering default insurance or bets that would make it lose so much money that yet another bailout would be necessary. It is as if financial gambling is economically necessary, not part of Las Vegas. Why should this matter a drachma to the Greeks? It is an intra-European bank regulatory problem. Yet to sidestep it, the ECB is telling Greece to sell off its water and sewer rights, ports, islands and other infrastructure. This veers on financial theater of the absurd. Of course some special interest always benefits from systemic absurdity, banal as it may be. Financial markets already have priced in the expectation that Greece will default in the end. It is only a question of when. Banks are using the time to take as much as they can and pass the losses onto the ECB, EU and IMF —“public” institutions that have more leverage than private creditors. So bankers become the sponsors of absurdity —and of the junk economics spouted so unthinkingly by the enforcers, cheerleaders for the banality of evil. It doesn’t really matter if their names are Trichet, Geithner or Papandreou. They are just kindred lumps on the vampire squid of creditor claims. The Greek crowds demonstrating before Parliament in Syntagma Square are providing their counterpart to “Arab Spring.” But what really can they do, short of violence —as long as the police and military side with the government that itself is siding with foreign creditors? The most effective tactic is to demand a national referendum on whether to accept the ECB’s terms for austerity, tax increases, public spending cutbacks and selloffs. This is how Iceland’s President stopped his country’s Social Democratic leadership from committing the economy to ruinous (and legally unnecessary) payments to Gordon Brown’s Labour Party demands and those of the Dutch for the Icesave and even the Kaupthing bailouts.
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