"If you are silent about your pain, they'll kill you and say you enjoyed it."
Zora Neale Hurston

Friday, 24 April 2015

The General Election's poor relation

You can't go anywhere these days without someone talking about the general election, or in Copeland, the mayoral election.  And it's right and proper tat we do, because it's a big deal, we get to choose who's going to be in charge for the next four years.

But we need to remember that there are other elections going on next month, and the people putting themselves forward will be making decisions that affect us directly -- of course I'm talking about the parish councils.

Thanks to the Vicar of Dibley, lots of people have a pretty dim view of parish council's, getting the idea that not much ever happens. But actually parish council's have a lot of powers and duties.

Click here for an idea of what parish council's actually do.

Most of the people sitting on parish council's are older adults, which is fine because they have quite a bit of time on their hands, but they're also not in the prime of life anymore...   While young people have loads of energy (usually)



But recruiting people all of the same age makes for a really bad team.  Consider the following:


A team of all young people won't get much done because of lack of funds; a team of all old people won't get much done because of lack of energy; and a team of all adults never happens because we're all to busy to join a team.

But if you combine young and old, you get to make use of the energy of the young combined with the funds and the wisdom of older adults.  It's a win-win situation.

And that brings me to my main point: parish councils are struggling to recruit people to join. Now, you have to be 18 or over to be a voting member of parish councils, but anyone can attend. And that means that anyone can (theoretically) give an opinion about the best way for a parish council to meet its duties and use its powers.

Anyone interested in getting involved in local politics, drop me a line and I'll get in touch with your local parish council and arrange introductions.

In other news

Yamini Karanam, a computer science student from Hyderabad, India, has had an evil twin removed from her head.

She'd suffered with headaches and confusion and no-one seemed to know what to do until her friends raised the $32,000 to get her to LA where a surgeon removed a tumour, complete with hair and teeth. The moral of the story: Friends are awesome.

And an evil twin is no laughing matter.




Friday, 17 April 2015

Registering to vote

There are just three days left to register an intention to vote in the General Election. So I'm going top take this opportunity to urge you to do so.

Anyone aged 16 and over can register to vote, and anyone 18 and over can vote.  Now, has anyone noticed a problem with those numbers?





 It's not wrong: you really can register to vote two years before you can actually vote. Now, assuming those of us working in local and national government haven't lost our minds there must be a reason for that, right?

Right.

Now, I've heard all the reasons why you should vote, and I have a problem with a few of them:


  • If you don't vote, then you can't complain. Well, that's just wrong.  I know lots of people who don't vote, and they seem to complain as much as anyone. Also, if non-voters can't complain, doesn't that mean that every person under 18 can't complain? Sounds like discrimination to me.
  • People died for the right to vote so you should use that right. People didn't die for the right to vote, they died for the right to have the option.  For centuries, women couldn't vote, poor people couldn't vote, people under 21 couldn't vote.   That was unfair, but it's also unfair to force people to do something against their will.  I have no problem with people not voting as a form of protest, but it has to be a conscious decision, otherwise it's just apathy.
  • Every vote makes a difference. That can sound like a pretty stupid remark in some ways. For example: imagine you were a Conservative voter in Liverpool Walton, a Labour safe seat.   


Labour
Conservative
Without your vote
24,709
2,241
With your vote
24,709
2,242

That one vote wouldn't make a dent.

Same if you supported the Labour party in Chesham and Amersham (a Conservative safe seat)


Conservative
Labour
Without your vote
31,658
2,942
With your vote
31,658
2,943

And it's worse if you support the Green Party: they got 767 votes in Chesham and Amersham, and didn't even have a candidate in Liverpool Walton.

[I reckon you can see why they call them 'safe' seats, if you're the MP there, your job is pretty safe]

They don't mean the other kind of safe seat...



Anyway, all those arguments aside. Registering to vote is different, and it's probably more important.

Governments can check the electoral roll, to see who's registered to vote.


I don't have that info, but I can see an estimate of who has voted, by age.


Until 2010, the number of 18-24 year olds was dropping election after election, and so political parties were less worried that they might vote for the opposition -- they weren't voting at all.

So the parties will do less to engage young people, because it's a lot of investment, for not much gain.

But...

If you register, if every 16 and 17 year old registers, all of the political parties will sit up and take notice, and they'll do everything in their power to encourage you to vote for them...

Sorry for the sexist pic, but you get the idea

 And finally...

Seriously worrying news: Doctor Who will be made into a movie, according to leaked documents from Sony.

Now to many of you that might sound awesome, but to those of us who are thirty and above, we know the last Dr Who movie ended the franchise for nine years. The TV show had already been cancelled in 1989, but the movie, was like taking a tired, elderly loved one out into the woods and finishing them off.

My suggestion for the new movie...?