"Chunks of the civil service to be moved out of London", says Michael Gove
"I think it is vitally important that decision-makers are close to people
"I think it is vitally important that decision-makers are close to people
I
think it is vitally important that the strength of the UK Government is
displayed across the whole of the United Kingdom and that we distribute
opportunity, jobs and investment fairly.
We’ve
already got civil servants in Scotland, who are working for the
Department for International Development, and in Wales, working for the
Department for Transport – but we can do more.
It’s good for the Union, it’s good for equal opportunity, it is good for what we call levelling up.
But my own view? I think that, if people were to see Parliament closer to
different parts of the United Kingdom, then I don’t see there are any
reasons why we can’t have more operations of the UK Parliament in
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
I will ensure that the Government publishes data showing who applies for and wins a place on the Civil Service’s prestigious 'fast stream' graduate scheme.
One of the ways that the civil service can be more representative of the UK is by having a broader geographical spread of decision-making in the UK. It doesn’t have to be the case that you feel you have to go to Oxbridge and to London to have an opportunity to be a decisive voice in shaping the future of this country.”
Neither Mr Gove nor Mr Sunak confirmed where in the UK the jobs could be relocated to. (It's York, though. It's not Bradford)
The Government has been planning a shake-up of the civil service for months with some Government figures said to see Whitehall as set in its ways.
Black Lives Matter
mr ishmael on multi-culturalism, murder and the rights of women to be ignored:
I
worked with a guy once, well, I say worked, I mean I was part of a
small army of people supervising and assisting Jaghinder with his
resettlement. He had done six years of a life sentence passed on him
for murdering his teenage daughter; somehow, in Alum Rock, Birmingham.
She had integrated a bit too much, or been insufficiently Sikhish, and
upset her father, this beardy bloke in a turban. He'd brought her to
Brum but he expected her to behave as though she was in Amritsar. What
can a poor bloke do, you know, if it's your religion or your daughter,
well, you gotta sharpen up the sacred knife and do your duty to Shiva
or Kali or whichever six-armed, fuck-mad, nonsensical deity is in
charge of child murder. He was an utterly charming man, aside from
being a rotten, cruel, fucked-up, heartless bastard who needed
dragging up and down Washwood Heath Road by his fucking beard.
Jaghinder Singh Gill, they're all called something like that, aren't
they, those Sikhs. Mad as fucking hatters. Live in some sort of Terry
Pratchett world, don't they? Anyway, this was in the 'eighties and the
Lifers' Department at the Home Office decided that because this was a cultural
murder, the six years would be enough and Jag could go back and pick up
the reins as a well-repected community leader and that's just what he
did, used to come into my office and tell me, in achingly precise Empire
English, how in the short time he'd been away, things on the street
had turned to shit, the young people, he complained, had little or no
respect for their elders. This is all true, honest, not invent. No
respect for their insane, homicidal elders.
The
authorities' extraordinary view of this kind of crime resulted from
a multi-culturalism/racism awareness/equal opportunities industry which
at that time rampaged through the public sector, damning all as
racist, plundering training budgets and making tidy careers for the
likes of Darcus Howe. The average life-term, then, was about twelve
and a half years, just as long as you admitted the crime and expressed
remorse, even if you hadn't done it. Jaghinder, of course, saw no crime
in his actions but they let him out anyway, sending a cheery invitation
to other would-be righteous, vengeful destroyers - Kill the bitch
(it's always a female, offends the Gods) and you'll be out in no time at
all, your cousin can run the Cash 'n' Carry in the meantime. It was as though the official wish to smooth the path of citizen-incomers
extended to there being a parallel criminal justice system, it never
applied to what we came to call the Afro-Caribbean community, the
blacks, but it was certainly noticeable - and socially counter
productive - as it applied to Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims.
They
have their own cute little ways, the screws, generally fuck-ups
themselves, with lance-corporalitis they run an organised, criminal
racket, far from scrutiny, successive governments terrified of upsetting
the greediest, laziest, least productive and most unreformed branch of
the public sector - Ah, these clever criminals, How do they get all
these drugs into the most secure buildings in the country? How indeed,
Home Secretary, how indeed? - and another way in which these all male,
closeted institutions discriminated between murderers was that the domestic
wasn't really a murderer at all, he'd just topped his Mrs, you know
what wimmen are like, she probably drove him to it. Now it is a fact,
or it used to be, that most killers are first offenders, that most
victims are killed by those closest to them and that only a fraction of
one per cent of those released on license re-offend seriously, the
lifer system can be said, therefore, to both punish the offender,
although nowhere near enough for skymadeupnewsandfilth, and protect the
public. But in the matter of the so-called domestic killer there
is a terrifying, almost officially sanctioned culture of misogyny, I
lost track of the number of times I heard someone say I only killed the
wife, the screws have told me I'll only do ten, twelve max. The
screws, obviously, most of them, from the same flawed mould as the
Wiltshire Lads, Sergeant Andrews and his shift of angry cocksuckers,
collude with Joe Bloggs in minimising the value of his spouse's life,
the slut, in an official and quasi-official trivialisation of half, or
more, of the world's population.
GIRLS ALLOWED
When my business took me to auction houses I was always amazed at how disparaged and undervalued was traditional women's work, embroidery, knitting, water colours, Hearts and Crafts.
this one, in mahogany, from the Royal Army Medical Corps, travelled all over the Empire
mmr ishmael's essays this week were:
I worked with a guy once drafted 12/09/2010
Girls Allowed drafted 10/08/2015
GIRLS ALLOWED
When my business took me to auction houses I was always amazed at how disparaged and undervalued was traditional women's work, embroidery, knitting, water colours, Hearts and Crafts.
Old
boxes, on the other hand, rudimentary things, fashioned by joiners or
carpenters in an afternoon, would fetch fifty pounds, I would renovate
them and they would make two or three hundred, retail, maybe a bit more,
they had been made to cart-about the meagre possessions of younger,
working women: the itinerant herring gutters or the scullery maids
working in service to the thieving classes - I worked, briefly, in a
big stately home, when I was a kid. Christ, you wouldn't believe the
servility of the staff, the decadent, pampered luxury demanded by the
owners; he, the Marquis, a screeching transcontinental fairy, she a
giddy Guinness daughter, jumped-up neurotic prats, the pair of them -
somehow, anyway, these items of working class luggage, which had originated in mediaeval times as kists for storing food and household goods, evolved into wedding - or dowry - chests, containing weddng goods and later were of portable use by those too poor to own proper trunks. These chests became transmuted, by the chancers of the stripped pine trade, into "blanket boxes" like what the victorian lady kept at the bottom of her bed, and although they were nothing of the sort, gullible wannabes bought them by the lorryload, even though they had long abandoned blankets for duvets. And sun-dried tomatoes. I still have a few boxes, among my souvenirs.
somehow, anyway, these items of working class luggage, which had originated in mediaeval times as kists for storing food and household goods, evolved into wedding - or dowry - chests, containing weddng goods and later were of portable use by those too poor to own proper trunks. These chests became transmuted, by the chancers of the stripped pine trade, into "blanket boxes" like what the victorian lady kept at the bottom of her bed, and although they were nothing of the sort, gullible wannabes bought them by the lorryload, even though they had long abandoned blankets for duvets. And sun-dried tomatoes. I still have a few boxes, among my souvenirs.
pine boxes, made by the thousand by local men |
this one, in mahogany, from the Royal Army Medical Corps, travelled all over the Empire
Hugely
intricate sewing samplers, however, painstakingly crafted by girls and
young women up until the early twentieth centuries, over long,
candle-lit evenings, then framed and glazed in oak firescreens made a
pound or two, if that; there was a time you couldn't give them away.
Amongst
other things, mrs ishmael is a needle-person, a sewist and a student of
fabric design, makes quilts, single-handed and in concert, so they are a
feature of my life, arts and crafts traditionally associated with
women. I don't sit-in or anything, I am just aware of it going on and of
the finished product, although, as with my stuff, nothing is ever
finished, just abandoned.
I guess an engineeer can say Right, this bastard's done, this pump pumps, this bridge bridges, this load bears; a dressing chest, though, like this one,
restored over Christmas, is never done; there are two or three things needed on this piece, a drawer runner here, a drawer stop there, a couple of tighter screws in those mad rococo handles and I would do them in a coupla minutes if I was putting it in a shop window, just needs a bit of work doing but I am fed up with it now, and even if I did do those jobs I would discover others, and if I completed them the whole thing'd be covered in finger prints and need rewaxing, it's crazy. And I only really bought it because I liked the mirror, thick, deeply cut and bevelled
and because if I hadn't bought it, someone would've covered it with a really out-there but DoYou-Know-What tasteful gloss paint, cos they're worth it, and it fits their dynamic lifestyle, I'd rather it was burnt.
Doesn't matter a fuck, really, what happens to old bits of furniture, it's just that if I lose my link to the old boys who fashioned these things - which is actually a link to an empire which saw, arriving by sail and steam, hardwoods from the tropics and pitch pine from North America and which workshopped for the World - then I may as well join the NewPeople, worshipping bits of silicon,
and myself. And LuvvinMyKids2Bits, Me-ing.
These contemporary worthies are aspiring
not to be something but to have something;
and, deaf, dumb and almost blind, they are played like fiddles.
And actually, do you know what, now that we've signed to Amazon we probably won't have to pay any tax at all, they don't.
The prime minister, no, he's a mate, we're neighbours in Chipping Sodom, yeah, with Rebecca, it's where the best people live.
Some say. That Top Gear only worked because what they call my yobbish, loutish, thicko, racist, bullyboy behaviour had a little frisson, only because it was on the BBC, a bit like getting your cock out in church, not that I go to church, and that anywhere else we'd just have been seen as what we are, a trio of desperate prats, not very bright but chippy. Chippy and short in Hammond's case. Others say that post-BBC, on a shopping channel, we will fall flat on our faces.
Doesn't matter, we get paid.
Whatever.
That's my justification, anyway, for the ash dressing chest on the top floor, and the mahogany and the oak and the red walnut ones, on the middle floor, and the inlaid mahogany one in pride of place and the sideboards and wardrobes and desks. In their materials they connect me to organic Creation and their makers' hands link us to the first jawbone-as-saw, the stone cutting tool, the bronze, the iron and the steel ages which wrought our world.
Norman Mailer raged that This is what's wrong with our children, everything they touch is lifeless plastic, inorganic, no wonder they're fucked-up.
I may completely finish this chest but it doesn't matter if I don't, it's near enough for jazz; Harris keeps his winter clothes, his who-he-is and has-he-had-his-jabs documents, his brushes and balls and flea-powders in its drawers, and there's some hats and gloves, which aren't for Harris.
I guess an engineeer can say Right, this bastard's done, this pump pumps, this bridge bridges, this load bears; a dressing chest, though, like this one,
restored over Christmas, is never done; there are two or three things needed on this piece, a drawer runner here, a drawer stop there, a couple of tighter screws in those mad rococo handles and I would do them in a coupla minutes if I was putting it in a shop window, just needs a bit of work doing but I am fed up with it now, and even if I did do those jobs I would discover others, and if I completed them the whole thing'd be covered in finger prints and need rewaxing, it's crazy. And I only really bought it because I liked the mirror, thick, deeply cut and bevelled
and because if I hadn't bought it, someone would've covered it with a really out-there but DoYou-Know-What tasteful gloss paint, cos they're worth it, and it fits their dynamic lifestyle, I'd rather it was burnt.
Doesn't matter a fuck, really, what happens to old bits of furniture, it's just that if I lose my link to the old boys who fashioned these things - which is actually a link to an empire which saw, arriving by sail and steam, hardwoods from the tropics and pitch pine from North America and which workshopped for the World - then I may as well join the NewPeople, worshipping bits of silicon,
and myself. And LuvvinMyKids2Bits, Me-ing.
These contemporary worthies are aspiring
not to be something but to have something;
and, deaf, dumb and almost blind, they are played like fiddles.
And actually, do you know what, now that we've signed to Amazon we probably won't have to pay any tax at all, they don't.
The prime minister, no, he's a mate, we're neighbours in Chipping Sodom, yeah, with Rebecca, it's where the best people live.
Some say. That Top Gear only worked because what they call my yobbish, loutish, thicko, racist, bullyboy behaviour had a little frisson, only because it was on the BBC, a bit like getting your cock out in church, not that I go to church, and that anywhere else we'd just have been seen as what we are, a trio of desperate prats, not very bright but chippy. Chippy and short in Hammond's case. Others say that post-BBC, on a shopping channel, we will fall flat on our faces.
Doesn't matter, we get paid.
Whatever.
That's my justification, anyway, for the ash dressing chest on the top floor, and the mahogany and the oak and the red walnut ones, on the middle floor, and the inlaid mahogany one in pride of place and the sideboards and wardrobes and desks. In their materials they connect me to organic Creation and their makers' hands link us to the first jawbone-as-saw, the stone cutting tool, the bronze, the iron and the steel ages which wrought our world.
Norman Mailer raged that This is what's wrong with our children, everything they touch is lifeless plastic, inorganic, no wonder they're fucked-up.
I may completely finish this chest but it doesn't matter if I don't, it's near enough for jazz; Harris keeps his winter clothes, his who-he-is and has-he-had-his-jabs documents, his brushes and balls and flea-powders in its drawers, and there's some hats and gloves, which aren't for Harris.
Most
people, on seeing pieces like this, would, at the very least, admire
the shine and some might look at the figuring and the joinery but most
would walk right past a piece of lace or tapestry, like this one.
There is a partial explananation for the low regard in which needlework and fabrics are held - unlike wood and metal, they decay relatively quickly. I saw a quilt a while back, dating from the American Civil War and it was ghostly threadbare, colours faded, such a shame, if you cried, you know you'd fill a lake with tears, the sewer's hands now coffin dust, her work ravaged by sunlight and use. These old boxes, however, cared for just a little, will last generations, I have an old, elm one, from the seventeenth century, just needs a bit of work. Abandonment, I suppose that's our gig, abandoning and being abandoned.
There is a partial explananation for the low regard in which needlework and fabrics are held - unlike wood and metal, they decay relatively quickly. I saw a quilt a while back, dating from the American Civil War and it was ghostly threadbare, colours faded, such a shame, if you cried, you know you'd fill a lake with tears, the sewer's hands now coffin dust, her work ravaged by sunlight and use. These old boxes, however, cared for just a little, will last generations, I have an old, elm one, from the seventeenth century, just needs a bit of work. Abandonment, I suppose that's our gig, abandoning and being abandoned.
My
unease at how we value the past stems from my Zen-Presbyterian-Marxism,
the anger at what we clumsily call sexism but is actually just one of
Oppression's refinements, race against race, worker against worker,
gender against gender and the latest - generation against generation.
We, the BabyBoomers are now, somehow, cast as the enemy of striving,
aspirational yoof, silly fucking bastards, wanting their lives away.
Only
in my lifetime have women received equal pay for equal effort and it'll
be a long cold day in Hell before GlobaCorp sees the essential work of
Motherhood as anything other than an impertinent inconvenience, every
governmental impetus is to mothers - or, indeed, fathers - abandoning
their children to lowly-paid strangers, that they, themselves, may step
enthusiastically onto the property gallows, feel the soul-extinction
of permanent debt, habituate themselves to the gnawing at the innards
of insatiable consumerism. How did this happen, that working
miserably down inTesco - to pay a mortgage which will eventually go
entirely to a private care home company located in Barbados and fronted
by some cunt like Micky Fallon - is exalted above child-rearing, is
seen, patronisingly as Doing The Right Thing, even though it is
obviously The Wrong Thing?
How did these
supplant these
with this?
Oh but mr ishmael, it hasn't supplanted anything, it's just about not discriminating against people over how they have sex. And why shouldn't gay men farm children, after all they've been through?
Oh but mr ishmael, it hasn't supplanted anything, it's just about not discriminating against people over how they have sex. And why shouldn't gay men farm children, after all they've been through?
Aye, right. All freaks together, now.
Celebrating Diversity.
Celebrating Diversity.
Anyway,
whilst wondering about the Maelstrom of Gender, I was looking at some
old, local photographs, mostly from the turn of the nineteenth century
but a few from the Nazi War and was struck by the very hard lives led by
Orkney women at that time. Men were often away fishing and tasks still
needed to be performed regularly - but even when the men were home
everybody was expected to scratch at the stoney land for a living;
motherhood, then, was no excuse for not doing back-breaking work but it
was a communal sort of labour, on the land, in the fresh air and it
involved the family.
The
Industrial Revolution never really reached the far North, indeed,
Orkney and Shetland were not on the national grid until the nineteen
sixties, so patterns of rural working life, long replaced or mechanised
in the South are historically close enough, here, to be have been
extensively photographed.
I
have recently read a short history of Caithness, outlining a similarly
arduous life led by that county's womenfolk but as usual, a picture can
be worth a thousand words. I thought I'd share some of them. They were
taken by local photographers - rather than by anthropologists, as is
often the case - we were talking recently about Alan Lomax's Library of
Congress, WhiteMan recordings of early Blues musicians.
mmr ishmael's essays this week were:
I worked with a guy once drafted 12/09/2010
Girls Allowed drafted 10/08/2015
13 comments:
Gove being a disingenuous git again. There is a classic Yes Minister on moving the civil service to the frozen north. Some lowly admin, rubber-stamping posts may move, actually thousands of them, but the reality is that the policy decision makers are not leaving London. Down here we have our National Capital in Canberra. When Australia became a federal nation, instead of independent states, actually only just over 100 years ago, there was some dispute between Sydney and Melbourne as to where the federal capital would be. The compromise of Canberra was chosen, being halfway between Sydney and Melbourne. And so a new capital was built on what had been up till then a cabbage farm. An inspired decision as it keep all the politicians and bureaucrats out of sight.
PS Mr mongoose: great test match, and good to see the Windies back. Although I boycotted the kneeling, I must say I was moved by Michael Holding's impromptu remarks. A great bowler and a great man. In the 1980's I took my wife on a holiday to Barbados; by coincidence England were playing the Windies. Had the pleasure of watching Viv hit 73 if memory serves. Sitting in the stands the rum bottle was passed up and down the line by the locals. Happy days.
The notion of a concentration camp for politicians is a sound one, Mr Mike. I would go further and anyone contemplating political office should be required to register with the authorities and wear an identifying patch on their clothing.
Also, if we defund the BBC and also let the McJocks go free, will they take all their whinging and whinign broadcasters back? If so, it would be a price worth paying. They could go up and live with mrs i. A sort of chilly Devil's Island with daffs.
They all looked very rusty - and the Poms let 7 chances slip yesterday - but it was good just to watch some cricket. The best Tests are often the 4X 200-odd matches, aren't they?. Archer looks to be one of those bowlers wohe needs a captain who can get him fired up.
Now, then, chaps, I can't have this. Chilly Devil's Island is full. They can't come and live with me. How about re-introducing transportation? mr mike has got lots of room. Granted, only a little fringe around the coastal edges is not actively hostile to humans, but I'm sure they could soon get it sorted out.
Mrs I: I'm a wood kind of person. We have wooden floors, sanded and coated in tung oil every few years - actually last time was 10 years ago. Old red ironbark; lovely colour and literally as hard as iron. We also have quite a bit of old furniture that we brought over from the UK. Tables and chairs and a nice victorian chaise longue that was in my office, but had to be banished as I was taking too many siestas. But the pride of place is an old Chinese display table (4 foot high, 3 foot long by 1 foot in width). Bought for about $50 in Sydney at an auction. Probably about 200 years old. Pale wood - not sure what type, not a nail or screw in sight, simple clean joints very tight, it stands bolt upright as solid as a rock.
Is red ironbark an antipodean tree, mr mike? I've not heard of it before. It sounds gorgeous. I'm told that the bottom has dropped out of the antique furniture market in the UK, so I suppose it is possible to buy champagne pieces on a lemonade budget. As mr ishmael revealed in his essay about Gentleman Jack last year, I grew up close by Shibden Hall in Yorkshire, and roamed about the woods and parklands there like a proper feral child, with my similarly scofflaw chums. We would go around the Hall and stables and gig shed, terrifically impressed with the wooden floors and staircases and fabulous, heavy furniture. Ever afterwards,when I saw a tremendous piece of Jacobean or Georgian furniture, I would describe it as a right Shibden Hall piece. Oh, yes, I had an encounter with a ghost there, as well.
Yes Mrs I, red ironbak is antipodean. A bit like mahogony, but maybe a little more red.
Great writing that.
You're right about the collapse of furniture prices, mrs i. mongosling1 is spreading his wings and furnishing a flat. We are buying handsome and pretty much immortal bits of furniture for the price or less than that of Ikea's finest tat. mg1 seems to have better aesthetic taste than his dad too. For which we should properly credit his mother.
Ironbark is that eucalyptus that doesn't shed its bark. It is v expensive over here but Oz probably has a thousand year's supply silently standing out there in the bush.
I wished once, mr mike, that I had oiled my oak floor when I put it down but I got fooled/confused by a polyeurethane seller bastard. But now if I could empty the house, I would sand it all back to the wood and leave the bugger pale and white, and scrub the dirty bits that happened along the way..
Mr Mongoose, you should do it - sand the floor I mean. It takes you back to your roots. Very satisfying, like a Gwyneth Poltrow cucumber facemask.
BTW when the red ironbark is sanded it weeps, even though its over 100 years old; like red tears; one of those catholic saints.
Jesu, Mr Mike, I'm going to get me some!
(Windies won the toss and are all over the place this morning.)
One in the shed crocked and four of them heaving with every step. Grind them into the dust tomorrow, Mr Mike. And then do it again next week. 400 at least now. I'd want 500.
I have looked up the ironbark, Sir. I cut down an alien eucalyptus here a couple of years ago and it was nothing like it - white, greeny-grey wood. A weed really.
Mongosling1 just bought a hundredweight of redwood (teak? probably) king-size bed which has signs of hand-finish, if not hand-build. It didn't cost a hundred quid and he will never need to buy another bed in his entire lifetime. What is wrong with the ikea-people?
Fashion, innit, mr mongoose. Happened in the late 60's and 70's, when Habitat was the desirable must-have. I remember film of people smashing up pianos for fun. Anything Victorian was condemned as too big, too dark, impractical. And living spaces are getting smaller. New houses come with built-in wardrobes which are practical and take up less space than a Victorian triple compactum wardrobe in deep plum coloured mahogany - not mahogany-effect, but genuine, endangered mahogany.
Have you seen flame mahogany? all the colours of flames. And burr mahogany, with its mad, circular grain, reflecting light and colour. Burr wood forms around growths and branch buds, and is especially prized.
I'm pleased that mongosling junior appreciates nice furniture - maybe he'll tell his friends and they'll start a revival.
I see the numbers are unravelling and it seems we may not really have been sick at all, or not sick enough.There's a revelation. Still, it's not like we've fucked anything up along the way and it has been a strange joy to do as we are told.
Such days.
Post a Comment