No, what Papandreou has done now is worse than the funk at St Paul’s. To do an immediate u-turn on a Referendum means there is no political principle behind this whatsoever.
Filed under Uncategorized
PAPANDREOU’S DARKEST HOUR
In principle, if Greece is becoming ungovernable, Papandreou is right, though it depends what he wants. If he is not arguing against the bailout and the cutbacks, but seeking a country mandate, is that not exactly what might release the tension and restore a country to some kind of democratic responsibility? Of course, if Greece voted NO, then it would plunge the Euro into a crisis deeper than this immediate market response, but then many argue Greece cannot afford to stay inside the Euro anyway. As protestors in London, New York and around the world argue the system is broken, or has deep systemic flaws, you can hardly inist that Papandreou is the simple villain. But we like easy scapegoats and now he has to survive a No Confidence motion too. If his vision is to take Greece towards the deal, but with a whole country really waking up to the responsibility of that, and the austerity too, then he has to stand his ground and make Europe democratic beyond the power of supranational deals and market makers who seem to show little responsibility to wider society.
Filed under Uncategorized
LOUIS THEROUX AND TRIP ADVISOR!
There could be no greater dis-recommendation for Democracy, and this Internet place, than the documentary about all the little critics on Trip Advisor. Perhaps being bullied at school brings out those gloopy figures, fighting back late in life, so we should teach our kids to fight harder, and earlier on. Perhaps the Internet glories in all the awful voices, but Bukowski was right, ‘there’s enough hate in the average man to destroy you’. William Hague has just advised, at this London Cyber Conference, on the world threat of Internet attacks, but he forgot the enemies within. It’s not that the small hotel review service does not have some useful function, it is the glee with which some self-appointed, self-aggrandizing critics seem to go about it all, and with very little right of come back. At least when it used to be about professional Newspaper Reviews, those little establishments mostly got ignored, or if you wanted to play in a big kitchen, you had no right not to expect the heat. Now anything can be splashed over the net and stay there, written often before the semi-detached flick knifers have even left, while people seem to expect the Ritz at the price of a Camper van. With it goes all that little England indignation about rights and freedoms and the rest. Sure, but go and do something more inspiring with existence.
We think most of the critics should be fed to the ‘exotic’ animals on Louis Theroux’s journey into the half wilds of middle America. It is a pity the documentary could not have added some note about The Muskingham County Farm tragedy, last week, because that lay at the other end of the explosion of private owners – majestic, meant-to-be-wild animals, lying dead in the American mud. Theroux’s big-girl’s-blouse whimsy though got a little irritating, because for a programme like that you need someone who really loves or understands animals, to roll up their sleeves, get in the cages and see if it is all right or wrong. Theroux does not like them at all. Of course, the animal Theroux really studies is the Human one and a weirder bunch of primates you could not have encountered this side of Regent’s Park. Not that that put us necessarily on the side of the critics snarling at animal cruelty either, because at least some of those eccentrics do glory in animals. What they mostly do not like is people, and if they’ve been watching the Trip Advisor show, how could you blame them?
Filed under America and the UK, Culture, Environment
THE TEST OF CAPITALISM, IN THE CRADLE OF DEMOCRACY?
The Greek Prime Minster Mr Papandreou’s test of the bailout deal is an absolutely critical moment. He is not rejecting it, he is trying to take it to the Greek people, and the cuts that are being imposed too, as part of the package. Is that not a true test of democracy, in the cradle of democracy, or the proof, in the shaking reactions of markets, of what has really happened to world democracy? Namely just what that loathed trader said, recently, that it is not Governments really in charge, but Goldman Sachs. It may highlight the problem of Greece joining the Euro-Zone in the first place, but it is actually a test of that trader’s words, a political compact, versus market inevitability – and whether Democracy really does exist, or what its limits are. You may think Greece has been handled lightly, that it brought many of its problems on itself, but you cannot too easily criticise the Prime Minister for following a democratic principle, in suggesting it. Commentators say this is an economic crisis, not a political one, but is that not exactly what protestors in London and New York are trying to talk about? Then though there are these worrying echoes out of the Greek army, that remind you of the days of the Colonels. We should all be flies on the wall at the lunch tomorrow, but then no one would get served any food!
Filed under Community
ALL SOULS AT ST PAUL’S
Well, there we are. Peace has broken out and the threat of legal action against the Occupy London protestors has been suspended, for now. Perhaps bankers will come down and hand out food parcels and we’ll all engage one another in a little miracle. It could do no harm.
Filed under Uncategorized
THE SPIRIT OF SAM!
One of the real foulweather friends of Phoenix Ark Press wrote yesterday to remind us of the argument we had had (that led to a suprising friendship) and our fury at the power that people can excercise over others, often both selfishly and so irresponsibly. It is what started Phoenix Ark Press and what gives us huge sympathy for people caught up in systems and situations that deprive them of a voice. There can be nothing worse for a writer either.
Perhaps it has a deal to do with Capitalism too, certainly today’s terrible disconnections, or the force of money’s and ambition’s ‘ unseen hand’ over individual lives and the cynical political behaviour in companies too, but maybe human nature was always reliably depressing. No one wants hand outs, and the spirit of The Friends of Phoenix Ark Press is about engagement, sharing some attempt to fight back, and a true story. Survival is the only thing that makes the money important, and to get a book out in a form some readers would like to see it, but anyone who cares about stories and books can be a friend of the Press.
Yet again ‘Lady C’, a pen name, has given a generous rallying cry to the Friends’ blog then, but reminded us of the magnificent indignation that inspired one of the greatest fighters for language, Samuel Johnson. So his famous letter of utter contempt to the Earl of Chesterfield is published again here, with an insistance that the arrogant and contemptuous ‘great’ in our case should never have become our own ignorant, loveless US publisher! It speaks for itself:
Samuel Johnson’s letter 7th February 1755
To The Right Honourable The Earl Of Chesterfield
My Lord,
I have been lately informed, by the proprietor of The World, that two papers, in which my Dictionary is recommended to the public, were written by your lordship. To be so distinguished is an honour which, being very little accustomed to favours from the great, I know not well how to receive, or in what terms to acknowledge.
When, upon some slight encouragement, I first visited your lordship, I was overpowered, like the rest of mankind, by the enchantment of your address, and could not forbear to wish that I might boast myself Le vainqueur du vainqueur de la terre, that I might obtain that regard for which I saw the world contending; but I found my attendance so little encouraged, that neither pride nor modesty would suffer me to continue it. When I had once addressed your Lordship in public, I had exhausted all the art of pleasing which a retired and uncourtly scholar can possess. I had done all that I could; and no man is well pleased to have his all neglected, be it ever so little.
Seven years, my lord, have now passed, since I waited in your outward rooms, or was repulsed from your door; during which time I have been pushing on my work through difficulties, of which it is useless to complain, and have brought it, at last, to the verge of publication, without one act of assistance, one word of encouragement, or one smile of favour. Such treatment I did not expect, for I never had a patron before.
The shepherd in Virgil grew at last acquainted with Love, and found him a native of the rocks.
Is not a patron my lord, one who looks with unconcern on a man struggling for life in the water, and, when he has reached ground, encumbers him with help? The notice which you have been pleased to take of my labours, had it been early, had been kind; but it has been delayed till I am indifferent, and cannot enjoy it: till I am solitary, and cannot impart it; till I am known, and do not want it. I hope it is no very cynical asperity not to confess obligations where no benefit has been received, or to be unwilling that the public should consider me as owing that to a patron, which providence has enabled me to do for myself.
Having carried on my work thus far with so little obligation to any favourer of learning, I shall not be disappointed though I should conclude it, if less be possible, with less; for I have been long wakened from that dream of hope, in which I once boasted myself with so much exultation,
My Lord,
Your lordship’s most humble, most obedient servant,
SAM. JOHNSON.
Filed under Uncategorized
FROM A FRIEND OF THE PRESS
David,
FRIENDS OF PHOENIX ARK PRESS is a wonderful idea! Count me in.
My continued prayer is for SCREAM OF THE WHITE BEAR to be published in the very near future. My donation was sent today. Please know your ever loyal fans are behind you 100%!!!
Thank you for listing me as one of your friends.
WiseWolf.
Thank You.
Phoenix Ark
Filed under Uncategorized
THE FRIENDS OF PHOENIX ARK PRESS
Dedications are not often talked about as part of books, but if you look in the dedication page to Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets you will see it reads like this:
“For Sean P. F. Harris, getaway driver and foulweather friend”.
Perhaps many of us need ‘foulweather friends’ at the moment, but JK Rowling has often talked of the trouble she found herself in, how long it lasted, and how she found out then who her real friends were. In The Times this weekend Lionel Shriver also wrote a rather good piece on the deep hurt of friendships gone bad, just as important, perhaps even more so, than physical relationships, or love affairs. So here is a Phoenix Ark Press list of fair and foulweather friends! The foulweather of course are the real ones, there in hard times and they have been the most unexpected and surprising.
FAIRWEATHER
Sarah Van More
Harold Rove
Tara Break
James ‘Iago’ Smith
Hugh Whitworth
Paul Simkins
P Mount
Lottie Reynolds
FOULWEATHER
Lady C
Dinah P
Tim B
Kate and Saint James
Bill and L
Cathy
Ajay
Marco
LC
Stephanie
CCD
Dr S
Murray
Wisewolf
Any one who has so kindly written to the blog.
So a brand new idea too, which is an invitation to become a Friend of Phoenix Ark Press. One day we’ll try to get you the badge, the sticker and the T-Shirt!
The idea is especially to help get Scream of the White Bear into print, as many fans would like to see it, namely not just to Kindle. You can Donate above, and it will only be used for that specific purpose, or you can just give moral support and share in a little community. Perhaps you can see it as a kind of books and culture club. Either way, if you sign up as Friend of the Press by writing with enormous enthusiasm and absurd passion and warmth to us here, you will receive a heartfelt thank you, a free copy if you donate, and your name in print too, in the dedication page, when and if (!!!) the book comes out.
Filed under Books
THE CITY OF LONDON AND ST PAUL’S
The mounting crisis at St Paul’s, with the resignation of the Dean, Graeme Knowles, is becoming almost Shakespearian, but it highlights something about London; the enormous power and significance of The Square Mile. The City of course was once exactly that, and the powers now enshrined by the Corporation of London were historically guarded furiously. It is why that area, bounded by its Dragon statues, has a separate branch of the police force. Now they don’t want tents and the masses on their patch, but they never did. They always wanted commerce. Stand on the hill and look straight down Fleet Street and you will see it runs past Temple Bar, down the Strand, to Westminster and then Buckingham Palace beyond. “What the City loves to earn, Westminster loves to spend” was the old adage, but they too always looked warily at one another and created complex checks and balances to protect their powers.
Around that mile, in Shakespeare’s day, grew up the so-called Liberties of London, like Southwark, South of the river. In Shoreditch was once the biggest collection of slums and brothels in Europe. So too lay the playhouses, the bear pits, and the beer and Pleasure Gardens. Of course, in a different age, it was the Bishop of Winchelsea in Southwark who both purchased his position from the Queen, at £400 a year, and licensed many of those brothels. How times have changed, in this rather haunting crisis of the headless Anglican Church, except that the City’s attitude has always remained the same and always will. It was they who established edicts to drive out rogues, vagabonds and sturdy beggars, whether wearing T-shirts calling for the abolishment of money or not, though in 1572 actors at least, the players, became exempt from those if protected by a Lord or patron, and so the Burbage family could establish London’s first permanent playhouse for purely theatrical performances – called simply, The Theatre. Yet still only on the fringes of that powerful Square Mile, as were The Red Lion, London’s first permanent building, The Curtain, Rose, Swan and Globe.
This may all be high drama, even farce, which is better than real violence, though a more violent farce may ensue, and now the Dale Farm Protestors against Capitalism have joined the merriments too. But it was foolish of St Paul’s to close its doors at all, and this succession of resignations may lead to a mounting tragedy that exposes the confusion in the Church and the powerlessness of people in the face of laws that are practical, even involved with Health and Safety, but also fundamentally designed to support the functioning of a City, and a now world financial system. Money and trade are what matters to London, as to New York. We all know we somehow need that system, which incited the Mail Online to produce a headline like ‘A Rabble Without A Cause’, yet it is the concentration of wealth within that Mile, like some vast piggy bank only those in the know understand, or can really raid, that makes this rather a telling moment, and the physical position of the protestors very interesting too, poised between the House of God and the House of Mammon. It seems to have got far more coverage than protestors traditionally camping outside the supposed seat of Government and legislative power, Parliament. In a world where wool and bushels of corn have become International bank transfers, complex derivatives and deals made far beyond the skirts of the Old Lady of Threadneadle Street, it is purely symbolic, but symbolism is what catches the media eye too and translates so many human aspirations and paradoxes around the globe. All the world’s a stage!
FROM OUR HUMOUR CORRESPONDENT!
Europe’s Problems Summed Up for Wordsmiths!
Pythagorean theorem: 24 words
Lord’s Prayer: 66 words
Archimedes’ Principle: 67 words
Ten Commandments: 179 words
Gettysburg Address: 286 words
US Declaration of Independence: 1,300 words
US Constitution with all 27 Amendments: 7,818 words
EU regulations on the sale of cabbage: 26,911 words
Filed under Uncategorized
