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1
Nov
30
2009

Apple out-appled?

Apple has typically been quite adept at simple adverts displaying the usability of their products, often mocking and contrasting themselves with PCs for instance. Some might have construed this as smug.

The Sun thought so:



This was taken from The Guardian website.

Comment at the bottom of the page from murranyho:

'shame it doesn't display facts correctly'
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0
Nov
29
2009

Contemporary Anglo-Islamic tension

As Swiss voters back a referendum proposal to ban the building of Minarets,one continues to be struck by the prevalence of the debate over ethnic social segregation.

This was the image that the Swiss Federal Commission Against Racisim derided as 'dangerous', apparently comparing the Islamic minaret to missiles. It exemplifies the degree of tension felt on the right at the condition of Swiss Islam.

Last week David Cameron raised an issue in Prime Minister's Questions over the thinking of two Islamic schools, the head teacher of which has been documented by BBC's Newsnight programme as thinking that western education is a threat to Muslim beliefs and values, and taking part in British society is contrary to that belief.

The state of relations between Islamic communities and those they exist both within and among could perhaps be seen as just as tense as they ever have been.

Taken from The World Today programme on the BBC World Service last week, a quote from Dr Taj Hargey, Chairman and Imam of the Muslim Education Centre of Oxford.

Paraphrasing, Dr Hargey said that

"What Muslims in Europe need to understand is that there is a clear distinction between culture and creed. The original rationale behind the Minarets is no longer relevant in the modern age. Muslims in Europe should reject Sharia law, which is neither timeless nor universal. By rejecting this foreign, outdated Sharia, the Swiss will produce a form of Islam which is relevant and rooted in that country. It is important to understand that Muslims who have come to England and Switzerland have come voluntarily to the West, they need to integrate and become part and parcel of that society. There are no rules preventing Muslims practising their faith in these countries. As such, they should respect the laws and rules of these countries. They should be respectful of the indigenous majority, and should build mosques thatare reflective of their new political and social environment, instead of blindly replicating the cultural traditions of their ancestral homes."

The Newsnight report by Richard Watson exhibited some of the hostility clearly felt by representatives of the schools at the press briefing. The worrying aspect of this scenario was heavily commented on in the British papers earlier last week, but was highlighted as early as February.

One can understand the worries of some Muslims after seeing the extent of the influence of the Jewish lobby in the UK exposed by Channel 4 a few weeks ago, yet this far from explains their hostility to the country in which they themselves often choose to reside, and raise their children.

This type of issue is not unique to either Islam or the United Kingdom, as Channel 4's Unreported World highlighted on Friday. Yet it remains prevalent to the extent that it can still dominate Prime Minister's Questions in the run-up to an election, and one suspects that, post-7/7, it informs much of national policing policy as well.

There is no easy answer to that question, and one that I intend to answer this week by talking to local ethnic and political representatives in Bournemouth.
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0
Nov
25
2009

Twin Sails Bridge

The planned Twin Sails Bridge on the Backwater Channel in Dorset forms the first part of Poole Council's regeneration strategy for Lower Hamworthy.


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1
Nov
19
2009

Outsourcing aggravation riles Councillor

A local union chief has accused Conservative Councillors of acting in their own interests this week as disputes over the planned outsourcing of departmental services at Bournemouth Borough Council continue.

David Higgins, Bournemouth branch secretary for UNISON, the trade union representing many local public sector workers, accused Deputy Leader of the Council, John Beesley, of playing politics over the issue of outsourcing, saying that the Councillor’s legacy was the impetus for the outsourcing project.

“Councillor Beesley’s the one that’s driving this. It’s his idea.

“Anyone that’s disagreed with him in the past has been chucked out of the cabinet or off committees.”

Councillor Beesley said he was extremely disappointed in Mr Higgins, adding that the union chief was being “wholly disingenuous.”

Concerns have been raised by opposition Councillors over the move, which would see council operations moved out of the remit of the local authority and into hands of private companies. Liberal Democrat Councillor Roger West called a special meeting in April to discuss the move, which he yesterday called “complete madness”.

The Council intends to offer contracts to outside companies in four different departments according to the Council’s ‘Efficiency Review 2010’ document, which says that efficiency savings could reach over £7 million.

Maria O’Reilly, Strategic ICT Manager for the council, said the local authority was “particularly keen for local jobs to stay in-house.”

However Councillor Beesley did concede that the council faced “difficult choices” in regards to the economic climate, offering assurances only that “the majority of jobs” could be kept local.

Yet according to a study undertaken by the Association for Public Service Excellence, there are at least 50 different examples of Councils bringing outsourced operations back in-house after dissatisfactory performances.

The Tory Council has come under much local scrutiny in recent weeks as a result of this, and other features of the internal politics of the council have come to light, notably the controversy embroiling council leader Stephen McLoughlin over the misuse of his council laptop.
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