Drug Legalisation
Posted 20th September 2006 at 10:02am by M1ke, tagged as Politics | Commenting Closed
Senior Liberal Democrats have urged the party's leadership to consider backing the legalisation of all drugs.
Now, I am unsure as to whether I agree on this, but I do have a few points that they must consider if they're going to go ahead with it. Firstly, to buy drugs you must register that you are buying them - this would then be taken into account should you turn up in a hospital, especially if you'd been taking hard drugs. Secondly, any tax profit placed on drugs must go directly into the NHS - we don't want drugs to become a government money maker. Thirdly the use of drugs must be banned on the streets, and if they're easier to obtain the penalties for using them in public must be increased by a large amount.
I doubt this legalisation will ever occur, but if it does I certainly hope they do it correctly, or Britain really could become a drugs capital of the world.
- Link to BBC News, Drug Legalisation
Gamers Have My Ideas Too
Posted 7th July 2006 at 3:19pm by M1ke, tagged as Politics | Commenting Closed
Stop making race a big deal, and race stops being a big deal.
It's nice to see Tim Buckey of Ctrl-Alt-Delete has the same view on race issues as I do - that the colour of skin is just the same as the colour of hair, and that these things only become noticed, and become a problem, because people are all to keen to point it out and make it so.
- Previous post Equality and Skin Colour
- Link to Ctrl+Alt+Del, Race Advert
More Equality Problems
Posted 14th June 2006 at 4:58pm by M1ke, tagged as Politics | Commenting Closed
Giving consumers choice in public services - and particularly in schools - is causing acute risks to racial equality.
Yep, I agree. As I've mentioned before, people love to segragate themselves. For some reason the government still isn't getting the idea - reading the article it goes on to say that they are bringing pupils from predominantly black schools to predominantly white schools. Yeh, because that doesn't just scream 'you are different!' at the kids...
Why oh why can't they just start ignoring it. Schools are for children, and unlike anyone over 11 these kids don't (or shouldn't) yet have any racial predjudice or views. Once above that age it sets in and never leaves. Everyone reading this knows what I mean. Whether or not you mean to, you see people with different skin colour as different to you - maybe you even see them as hostile to you. That kind of problem can only be corrected by fixing the way we bring up children. And the government needs to listen.
- Previous post Equality and Skin Colour
- Link to BBC UK, School choice means classroom ghettos
Net Neutrality
Posted 25th April 2006 at 6:01pm by M1ke, tagged as Politics | Commenting Closed
It may come as a shock to some readers, but the internet isn't without governance - there are backbone servers, name servers and linking servers that list IP addresses, web address and transfer people around the net. These have to be owned by some companies, and action by these companies in America is threatening, through their political system, to give them power to choose who gets to connect to where - if a company pays less, their site loads slower (SaveTheNet). Now I'm not directly sure how much this impacts England, but a situation such as this in any part of the internet could compromise the whole damned thing. Unfortunately the campaign against this is being carried out in America, as they can lobby their own member of congress, but I'm making you aware of it here. I'm going to find some UK site about this to see how we can get a say/if it affects us directly, but whatever the result of that is - fight the power!
I found out about this from the Ctrl-Alt-Delete webcomic, and it's always nice to see gamers are still the first to react when anything threatens the internet (CAD). It may have been created for science, but gamers brought it forward.
Equality and Skin Colour
Posted 9th February 2006 at 12:00pm by M1ke, tagged as Politics | Commenting Closed
Ever since Martin Luther King's civil rights movement, we have been aware of the need for equality in our society. This is a fact that does not change - everyone should be treated on their actions and merits, and not judged on circumstance. But recently it seems that people are forgetting that if things are equal, they don't need to be considered.
2+3 = 5
5=5
0=0
That's a simple mathematical example of something that has nothing to do with maths. What I'm getting at is that there is still a high level of segregation in our western society. The two main areas of discrimination are between opposite sexes, and different races - more specifically, different skin colours. The former is more of a complex issue, as men and women can be very different in a lot of aspects, and so there are considerations to be made when hiring them for jobs, for example. But two people with different skin colour have just that, and nothing more different. Just look at Michael Jackson - despite looking like a bit of a freak, he's pretty convincingly white. Skin colour is no different from hair colour, eye colour or anything else.
This is all very obvious - indeed all movements aimed at promoting 'equality' have made this clear (anti-apartheid, civil rights etc.). But if this is so, why do we keep having it shoved down our faces? Whatever people may say, we still have segregation, and I'd reckon that around 80% of the population of England segregate themselves from people with a different skin colour. Not just people - the media is a prime culprit, as is the government. Let's look at a few areas in which segregation is made very obvious:
- 1Xtra, radio for black music
- The Mojo awards, music awards for black music
- Hiring regulations on ethnicity
- Being asked to put down an ethnic type on surveys
- Promotions, campaigns and the like on contributions by ethnic groups
- Regulations against 'racism'
Now that was rather a diverse list, and what was apparent? That we still live in a society where skin colour segregates us.
Now, there will already be people reading this and thinking 'racist' in my general direction, because I seem to be opposed to what people would view as 'inclusion' of other groups. This is not the case, what I am saying here is that there are no other groups - or not separated by such ridiculous criteria as skin colour. Sure, a black person from Africa has a very different cultural view in comparison to a white person in London - but the same is true between a white person in London and one in Russia, between a black person in America and one in Asia. The upbringing, the choices, the location, all these things contribute to the wonderful diversity we see in society, but skin colour is meaningless.
I class myself as British - I am proud of this as it is my home country. A friend of mine back at High School classed himself as Mauritian, due to his coming from there. He had black skin, but his outlook was different from mine only because of where he had come from. Another boy, like me, classed himself as British. He also had black skin, but in this case his outlook did not differ from mine, because we grew up in the same place, went to the same school and the like. Segregation based on skin colour is, as you can see, stupid.
But why do we still do it then? My own guess is that it's just inbuilt into us, in our upbringing. A child sees a boy in his infant class with black skin and thinks nothing of it. He goes home, tells his mummy that his new friend has black hair, brown eyes and black skin. His mummy tells him that he must be respectful of the boy, that he mustn't offend him, that he must be careful what he says. The child now views the boy as something different from him, something separated. The boy's parents maybe did the same - as their boy was going into a class with all white people, they told him that he shouldn't be afraid of them, that they were no better than him, that he should stand up for himself. The boy would have done all that out of social interaction anyway, but now he does it because he thinks he is different. As he grows up, he will gravitate towards other black boys, and the chain of segregation continues. How easy it is, to be careful of something and end up highlighting its existence all the more.
The answer, in the end, is not for me to decide. Were I in charge of the country, I would order that people never be forced to see differences - that they should make their own minds up. Radio stations should play musical genres, not play music depending on the skin colour of the musician. Awards should be given to those deserving of awards, jobs given to those who fit the bill. Maybe some job interviewers still have racial prejudice - so how about preventing face to face contact if the boss of an interviewer believes this to be the case. In schools, remove the posters promoting equality - instead let the children never see a difference. In law, treat those in the court as if they too had full body suits on, as if their skin colour were hidden - judge on their behaviour. Whatever people may say, adding more laws for protection of this so called 'equality,' bringing in more teaching of it, promoting any group in any area only ever reinforces the segregated society - no matter how good people feel it to be.
If the system worked, I wouldn't even be writing this lengthy blog, as I would never have noticed the difference between black and white.