Archive For The “Media” Category

Electrical Image

By | August 23, 2011

OK this is shameless self publicity, but what the hell, its my blog! Finally, I’ve got around to putting a portfolio of my photography up on the web. It can be found at Electrical Image, hosted by the very wonderful 500px. Should anyone become so enthralled as to wish to purchase any of my work, [...]

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The Scandal That Keeps On Giving…

By | July 17, 2011

The view from Holloway is probably quite different to that from Chipping Norton, the tory stronghold where the likes of Rebekah Brooks and Jeremy Clarkson hobnob with hapless Prime Minister David Cameron. Yet it is the view from Holloway with which Ms.Brooks may become most familiar. The Phone Hacking scandal is shaping up nicely. If [...]

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Something Wicked This Way Comes…

By | July 7, 2011

Is the phone hacking scandal David Cameron’s personal Watergate? We appear to have all the ingredients necessary to topple an unelected government for whom cynicism and self interest appear to be the only identifiable characteristics. So why is the press tip toeing around this story like cattle avoiding an abattoir? For those who haven’t been [...]

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What The Hell Happened To Corrie?

By | May 29, 2011

Last night I found myself watching for reasons that escape me now, a vacuous parade of teenage nincompoops parading some half baked storyline involving kidnap, unrequited love, murder most foul and erm more kidnap on catch up TV. The pace was fast and as furious as if it were directed by someone suffering from St. [...]

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The Macallan – Masters of Photography Competition

By | May 10, 2011

The excellent Macallan have accepted two of my photographs for entry into The Macallan Masters of Photography Competition. Clearly they are people of consumate taste! The finalists will be voted in by the public – that means you, after which the very eminent Albert Watson will pass judgement and select the winner. I suspect a [...]

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198 Methods on Non Violent Action

By | March 20, 2011


Nonviolence is the greatest force at the disposal of mankind. It is mightier than the mightiest weapon of destruction devised by the ingenuity of man.


I object to violence because when it appears to do good, the good is only temporary; the evil it does is permanent.

Mahatma Ghandi

A week is a long time under the eyes of the global media. Events in Japan managed to stay on screens and front pages for just about that long, until last night when ‘Allied forces’ started missile attacks on Libya. The hunt for drama and stories is a hunger that must be constantly fed, thus all eyes moved on. Explosions carry far more drama than firehoses (the main story coming out of Fukushima Daiichi).While there are many arguments given in favour of outside military intervention in Libya’s internal conflict, some even hard to refute, a stepping up of aggression inevitably leads to more trouble down the line, more deaths, and easy propaganda coups for those such actions are directed against (in this case Gaddafi).Should there not be a long and drawn out conflict, in Britain Cameron may well come out of this with his own ‘Falklands moment’ – a comparable incident that turned around Thatcher’s unpopularity and laid the groundwork for a decade of Thatcherism – making it harder to turn back the tide of cuts and changes in this country. This may be of little importance to the Libyan people opposed to Gaddafi, but could be but one consequential turning point in Britain felt for many years to come.Peaceful objection to militarism of any sort is harder to justify in the face of the slaughter of innocents, but I think that as more and more countries slide into bombing campaigns, it’s worth taking a moment to pause and consider other methods of non violent action. Maybe none of the actions that are described in the content of this post would make a jot of difference to what Gaddafi seems to be doing, but they certainly had some effect in Egypt and Tunisia this year.Dr. Gene Sharp created a list of 198 methods of non violent direct action that can be used to express opposition to an individual, government or other system. These include protest and persuasion, noncooperation, and intervention. This list was supposedly influential (and translated into Arabic) in what happened in Tahrir Square just last month, as it was in the revolutionary changes that swept Eastern Europe in the late 80′s/early 90′s.They are published in English here in the document below, or are available as direct downloads here (same document as embed) and here (1 page, full colour). If any readers have pdfs of version translated into other languages, they are welcome to link to them in the comments below and I’ll try to update the post with more versions. For more on the Albert Einstein Institution, an organisation that studies nonviolent action around the world and is part-run by Sharp, click here.

198 Methods of Non Violent Action
Photo credits: Atomic Headlines by London Permaculture (issued under CC-BY- NC-SA licence), LIBYA/ by B.R.Q. Network (issued under CC-BY licence)


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198 Methods on Non Violent Action

By | March 20, 2011


Nonviolence is the greatest force at the disposal of mankind. It is mightier than the mightiest weapon of destruction devised by the ingenuity of man.


I object to violence because when it appears to do good, the good is only temporary; the evil it does is permanent.

Mahatma Ghandi

A week is a long time under the eyes of the global media. Events in Japan managed to stay on screens and front pages for just about that long, until last night when ‘Allied forces’ started missile attacks on Libya. The hunt for drama and stories is a hunger that must be constantly fed, thus all eyes moved on. Explosions carry far more drama than firehoses (the main story coming out of Fukushima Daiichi).While there are many arguments given in favour of outside military intervention in Libya’s internal conflict, some even hard to refute, a stepping up of aggression inevitably leads to more trouble down the line, more deaths, and easy propaganda coups for those such actions are directed against (in this case Gaddafi).Should there not be a long and drawn out conflict, in Britain Cameron may well come out of this with his own ‘Falklands moment’ – a comparable incident that turned around Thatcher’s unpopularity and laid the groundwork for a decade of Thatcherism – making it harder to turn back the tide of cuts and changes in this country. This may be of little importance to the Libyan people opposed to Gaddafi, but could be but one consequential turning point in Britain felt for many years to come.Peaceful objection to militarism of any sort is harder to justify in the face of the slaughter of innocents, but I think that as more and more countries slide into bombing campaigns, it’s worth taking a moment to pause and consider other methods of non violent action. Maybe none of the actions that are described in the content of this post would make a jot of difference to what Gaddafi seems to be doing, but they certainly had some effect in Egypt and Tunisia this year.Dr. Gene Sharp created a list of 198 methods of non violent direct action that can be used to express opposition to an individual, government or other system. These include protest and persuasion, noncooperation, and intervention. This list was supposedly influential (and translated into Arabic) in what happened in Tahrir Square just last month, as it was in the revolutionary changes that swept Eastern Europe in the late 80′s/early 90′s.They are published in English here in the document below, or are available as direct downloads here (same document as embed) and here (1 page, full colour). If any readers have pdfs of version translated into other languages, they are welcome to link to them in the comments below and I’ll try to update the post with more versions. For more on the Albert Einstein Institution, an organisation that studies nonviolent action around the world and is part-run by Sharp, click here.

198 Methods of Non Violent Action
Photo credits: Atomic Headlines by London Permaculture (issued under CC-BY- NC-SA licence), LIBYA/ by B.R.Q. Network (issued under CC-BY licence)


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Choccywoccydoodah

By | March 12, 2011

Doctor, my sides are splitting! This is reality tv as you’ve never seen it before, baroque, brightonesque and utterly bonkers. The cakes are magnificent and the characters are extraordinary – especially Christine the creative director and Dave, the head chocolatier. Add to the mix supercool cook Jim and “ambitious assistant” Tom, stir, stand back and [...]

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Posh and Posher – BBC2

By | January 27, 2011

Andrew Neil’s polemic about the influence of the public school system on english politics and the evaporation of the meritocracy ushered in by the likes of Harold Wilson on the left and Margaret Thatcher on the right offered up some truly staggering statistics. Try this one for size – 75% of the coalition cabinet are [...]

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Cloud Combobulated

By | January 17, 2011

Combobulate – to bring something out of a state of confusion or disarray. Cloud computing is a game changing innovation that will change the way we think of computers for ever. Unusually for game changing plays, this one is the product of incremental innovations delivered over a period of several years. Service Oriented Architecture, Virtualisation [...]

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