Monday, 31 December 2018

2018 on Reflection...


2018 has been an interesting year of ups and downs for me, just like it’s been for everybody else. I’m not at liberty to talk about a lot of it as there are things I deliberately keep quiet about on the internet now, but I will go over some of the most significant changes:
Probably the most salient of them was the fact that I moved out of my Mom and Dads after nearly 33 years and rented a flat in Wolverhampton with my girlfriend Kirsty. It’s been a very positive experience for the most part; with my routine shaken up somewhat, I managed to re-adjust to life quite quickly and I’m enjoying it. We’ve got a good landlord, a decent amount of space and a useful location, and while it is supposed to be temporary while we save up some money to buy a house for ourselves, we’ve done a pretty good job of making the flat into a home.
With that, and the responsibilities that come with it, herald a number of changes. Some of the things I’ve been doing with music and games have had a massive slowdown, or stopped altogether. I won’t be returning to the Black Country Roleplaying Society for a long time, if ever, and I don’t get anywhere near as much time to go to hobby game shops anymore. Painting and playing at home is an option, but not one I choose to indulge in very often simply because of the faff involved; I might try to rectify that in the coming year. I’ve also slowed down the number of video games I’ve been playing and buying, the latter of which at least is beneficial! There just isn’t the time to play very many of them.
As for gigs, that’s slowed down a lot too. A couple of years ago I was wandering around telling everybody I was in five bands, and while I’m still technically a member of all five bands, none of us are particularly busy at the moment. The Fakes operate on an “As and When” basis, Raphaella Kornarskis tends to have short runs of gigs that we work really hard for and then leave it for a few weeks or months, Cherry Bomb is still ironing out the act, The Revolt do a couple of gigs a year but no more, and Wolf Country seems to have fallen by the wayside as other aspects of our lives have got in the way – though I am hopeful we’ll pick it up again in the future. My solo gigs have also ground to a halt; I do the occasional charity one when I’m asked but I don’t go to open mics anymore. There was no point where I decided I was never going to do it again, and I’m not saying I never will. It was more a case of noticing I hadn’t done any for a while, thinking about some of the reasons why and realising that it fit the changes that had been made in my life.
I guess the number one reason for all of this is time. In the past, if I wanted to do an open mic, or go to a gaming afternoon, I could just do it. Now, it requires the same kind of planning and deliberation more appropriate for a NATO airstrike, in order that I might avoid the kind of casualty rate involved with a NATO airstrike. The lack of spontaneous decision-making sucks a lot of the fun out of gigs, hobbies, NATO airstrikes, so they rarely happen anymore. It tends to be just video games for me now, so that I can just pick them up and have a play.
Still, 2018 had a lot of changes for me in ways I never expected, so we’ll see how far we get into 2019 before I get another surprise! We’ll take things as they come, and see what happens.
And, because sadly I have to say it, that bit about NATO airstrikes was a joke. I was joking. I am in no way affiliated with NATO, have no authority to authorise an airstrike, and would not take any recreational value from doing so.

Thursday, 12 April 2018

Removal of Memorials: Check your facts...


So we’ve got this nonsense doing the rounds at the moment, usually from so-called Far-Right sites and groups:
 
For those of you who don’t know, Lee Rigby was a fusilier in the army who was murdered in 2014 by two extremists, one of which is serving a whole life sentence in prison, and the other serving 45 years. Henry Vincent was stabbed to death last week when he broke in to someone’s home; the man who killed him was arrested, released on bail and was told that no further action would be taken.
Now let’s clear the facts up, starting with Lee Rigby:
The memorial to Mr Rigby was set up outside the Royal Artillery barracks where he was murdered, and the council did indeed take it down. It is not true that the council removed the memorial to Mr Rigby because it was deemed “unsightly.” In actual fact, it was taken down at the request of Mr Rigby’s family. To honour his memory, a plaque planned to be installed at St George’s Garrison Church, opposite the barracks.[1]
The council also said that far-right groups were using the shrine for their own causes, and had threatened council workers for going about their job. Given the nuisance that supporters of these far-right groups made of themselves during the trial of Rigby’s murderers, they don’t do much to endear themselves to any cause worth supporting.[2] They appear to be using this tragic event as a way to reinforce their own ideologies.
Moving on to Henry Vincent:
Flowers have gone up as a tribute to a man who, whatever else he was, was a father and a partner. Members of his family have put up the flowers. It could be argued that this was a deliberately caustic act, given the circumstances of Mr Vincent’s death. At the time of writing, these flowers have been pulled down four times by members of the local community, and been replaced by the family each time. The police are now in attendance, to provide reassurance to local residents.[3]
Let’s be clear on this last point -  the police are there to keep the peace; to make sure this dispute between Mr Vincent’s family and the local residents does not result in violence, criminal acts or public order disruptions. They are not there for the express purpose of defending a shrine. So it is wrong to say that the cops are backing the memorial.
What’s actually going on is that whoever has created this macro has taken two unrelated incidents, and twisted the facts to suggest that it’s somehow more important to defend the memory of a career criminal than a war hero. The “facts” it presents are manipulated at best, and false at worst. And yet I’ve seen it shared on my Facebook feed at least twice in one day, with angry reactions. The best I can say about it is that some of the comments at least recognise that what the macro is saying simply isn’t true.
I’ve been seeing a lot of, and have very little patience with, macros created to support a point, usually a heavily debated and complex issue, boiled down to two sentences devoid of all context but the picture it was shared with. The point these macros make are more often than not absolutely meaningless, and they serve little purpose but to say more about the people creating and sharing them than any message they purport to share.
This is somehow even worse. Whoever created this nonsense has done so with the intention of supporting a so-called “Far-Right” cause, making it seem as though authorities do not care about British values, or what it means to be British, or take any pride in being English, or whatever the rhetoric is. The truth is that these were both tragic incidents, and while the purportrators of these crimes may arguably have got what they deserved, the incidents also have the ramifications of bereaved families and people for whom life will never be the same again. To take such instances and turn them into a nonsensical point to support an out-dated and bigoted cause is crass, idiotic and should be ignored.


[1] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-42829652
[2] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-26357007
[3] https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/war-of-the-posies-police-urged-to-step-in-as-shrine-to-stabbed-burglar-henry-vincent-is-back-up-for-a3811206.html