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Category: Journalism

Up the Quaggy: a coronavirus cycle ride

Posted on 5 April, 20205 April, 2020 by preorg

It was the first truly warm day of spring and the fourteenth day since the beginning of the coronavirus lockdown. For my government-mandated exercise I had been exploring by bicycle the Quaggy River, after which my housing co-operative is named. There was no particular reason to do this except for the arbitrary name of the…

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The fight for control must take place where it really matters: in the arenas of everyday life

Posted on 4 March, 201815 June, 2019 by preorg

Renting a home in London can be a living nightmare. Renters feel little control over their own homes, are forbidden to hang pictures on a wall, or take up state support in hard times. Their happiness and mental health is held hostage to the whims of landlords who refuse to do essential repairs or enter…

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Own everything together

Posted on 4 March, 201815 June, 2019 by preorg

We live in times of high political turbulence. Surveying flailing governments from Spain to the United States, it seems a good moment to face up to the evidence of system failures that face us. Millions going to food banks or unable to afford decent housing in the richest countries in the world reveals a systems failure. An…

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People I met in Cuba

Posted on 15 February, 201815 June, 2019 by preorg

Ana Maria owns the casa in which I’m staying. She is talkative, enthusiastic, and helpful. When we entered the room I was to stay in, I put down my bags. She promptly moved them to what she felt to be a more appropriate place. Her advice on restaurants and buses and places to go has…

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Why did anti-globalisation fail and anti-globalism succeed?

Posted on 26 August, 201715 June, 2019 by preorg

Across the world the political centre ground is disappearing, and the new enemy of the people is globalism. Watching the rise of the nationalist right is particularly frustrating if, like me, you took part in protests in the late 1990s and early 2000s against globalisation. These protests for a few years united the radical left…

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Brexit to nowhere? Finding hope in convivial institutions

Posted on 21 August, 201621 August, 2016 by preorg

It appears that many people in the UK, some of them left-inclined, joined a right-driven rush to exit the EU, because they feel abandoned by the institutions that rule us. Leave voters have reacted to this with clear anti-establishment sentiment; it is even visible in claims that we simply need ‘a change’. Voters’ services had…

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The Housing Hustle – why building more houses won’t solve London’s housing crisis

Posted on 13 May, 2016 by preorg

House prices in London, most people agree, are too high. Orthodoxy on left and right says that this is due either to the free market or constraints on the free market respectively. The two sides propose different solutions. The right demand that planning controls be minimized or simply scrapped, while the left demand that new…

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Lewisham Council plans to make a profit from renters: Besson Street and beyond

Posted on 10 December, 201516 November, 2016 by preorg

Lewisham Council has finally unveiled its plan to re-develop a large empty plot of land at Besson Street, New Cross Gate, within what is sometimes known as the Kender Triangle. The plans are an interesting departure for the council, who instead of building new council housing, plans to build a Private Rented Sector (PRS) scheme of 250…

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Is the positive thinking industry built on wishful thinking?

Posted on 9 December, 20159 December, 2015 by preorg

Few people these days would believe in a medicine that could cure all diseases, yet many people, it seems, believe in the mental cure-all of positive thinking. Thinking positively will make you happy, healthy, successful, a good parent, a good daughter, a good citizen, a good employee, a good business person; all the rewards of…

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Should the Marikana massacre have killed the positive thinking industry?

Posted on 13 June, 2015 by preorg

In August 2012 South African police shot dead 34 mine workers at Marikana in a massacre that horrified the world. As the post-mortems rolled in there was plenty of blame to go around for the mining company Lonmin, union leaders, and politicians. No blame however was attributed to the positive thinking industry. That is not…

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