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THE STATE PENSION 1908 - 2008

 
 State pensions are paid by the government to individuals and 2008 marks the centenary of the Old Age Pension Act in Britain. It took ten years of campaigning by liberal reformers, non-conformists, and above all, trade unionists, to win the older people’s right to an income that would abolish the spectre of dying in the workhouse. When the the Old Age Pension Act was passed in August 1908, by the Liberal Party, it was the very first time that the government had accepted that it had a duty to look after people in their old age.  Prior to that time the old were completely dependent on the Elizabethan Poor Laws that were put in place first at the end of the sixteenth century, in 1597, and early in the seventeenth century, in 1601.  Indeed, although the Poor Laws were amended and modified a number of times in both the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the original Poor Laws were not superseded in the UK until the National Assistance Act was passed in 1948. The Old Age Pension Act from a hundred years ago was the first crack in the dam and provided a dignified alternative to Parish support and the poorhouse for ageing UK citizens. 
The first payments of the old-age pension were made in January 1909. The benefit was five shillings which was equivalent to about 20% of average weekly income. It was payable to men and women over the age of 70 but later reduced to 65, when average life expectancy was around 50.  The average life expectancy was up to 75 by 2000.
For working people on low factory wages it was impossible to save or put anything aside for their old age. Industrialisation had uprooted the rural population and traditional domestic working and family stability suffered, leaving thousands of old people without any support. Their last resort was the workhouse. Modelled upon the prison system, discipline was rigid and breaking the rules could lead to increased working hours, reduced diets or solitary confinement. By 1891, England had a population of just over 29 Million, of which 1.3million were paupers. Amongst those, the over 60s accounted for 31%. The workhouse had become the state’s way of ‘caring’ for the elderly. Since 1908, the state pension has been through numerous changes, most notably becoming a contributory, pay-as-you-go scheme of National Insurance in 1946. But over the years it has not reflected the growth in our national wealth, and as a percentage of average earnings it has continued to decrease.
To pay for the reform in 1909 Lloyd George announced what became known as the People's Budget. This included increases in taxation. Whereas people on lower incomes were to pay 9d in the pound, those on annual incomes of over £3,000 had to pay 1s. 2d  in the pound. Lloyd George also introduced a new supertax of 6d in the pound for those earning £5000 a year. Other measures included an increase in death duties on the estates of the rich and heavy taxes on profits gained from the ownership and sale of property.
The basic state pension in the UK today is one of the least generous safety-nets for older citizens in the whole of the European Union. Less than 10% of GDP.An average earner retiring in 2007 would receive a pension worth just 17% of their salary, compared with an EU average of 57%. The state retirement age, which is set to be 65 for men and women by 2020, will rise to 66 between 2024 and 2026, to 67 between 2034 and 2036 and to 68 between 2044 and 2046. Britain has one of the lowest participation rates of older people in the labour market in the industrialised world. 5.2 per cent of over-65s are in paid employment, compared with 12.4 per cent in the US, 10.2 per cent in Sweden and 22.1 per cent in Japan.
 
 
  
 

WHY I DON'T BUY ISRAELI PRODUCE

 

At least seven Palestinians, including a mother and her four young children, have been killed during an Israeli raid in northern Gaza, medics say. The family members were killed when a missile hit their home in Beit Hanoun. In separate incidents, a militant and a farmer were killed. The children were aged between one and six years old, the medics said. On Sunday in nearby Beit Lahiya Israeli raids left a 14-year-old girl dead and eight others injured.

Over my heart a rose

 

 

 

Over the high, brown mountain
The sound of singing goes.
Say, love, do you hear me,
Hear my sonnets ring?
Over the high, brown mountain,
Love, do you hear me sing?

By highway, love, and byway
The snows succeed the rose.
Over the high, brown mountain
The wind of winter blows.
Say, love, do you hear me,
Hear my sonnets ring?
Over the high, brown mountain
I sound the song of spring,
I throw the flowers of spring.
Do you hear the song of spring?
Hear you the songs of spring?

 

 

 Robert Louis Stevenson

PEOPLE POWER 2 - JUNKS AWAY

 

A ship carrying weapons to Zimbabwe is returning to its home port after neighbouring countries refused to unload it. "The shipping company took this decision," said  China's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman,Jiang Yu.

 

 

ENGLAND'S HEART IS SOUND AS OAK.

 

  APRIL 23rd

ST. GEORGE'S DAY

 

 

 

          

 

St.George was probably first made well known in England by Arculpus and Adamnan in the early eighth century. The Acts of St George, which recounted his visits to Caerleon and Glastonbury while on service in England, were translated into anglo saxon. Among churches dedicated to St George was one at Doncaster in 1061. George was adopted as the patron saint of soldiers after he was said to have appeared to the Crusader army at the Battle of Antioch in 1098. Many similar stories were transmitted to the West by Crusaders who had heard them from Byzantine troops, and were circulated further by the troubadours. When Richard 1 was campaigning in Palestine in 1191-92 he put the army under the protection of St George. Because of his widespread following, particularly in the Near East, and the many miracles attributed to him, George became universally recognized as a saint sometime after 900. Originally, veneration as a saint was authorized by local bishops but, after a number of scandals, the Popes began in the twelfth century to take control of the procedure and to systematize it. A lesser holiday in honour of St George, to be kept on 23 April, was declared by the Synod of Oxford in 1222; and St George had become acknowledged as Patron Saint of England by the end of the fourteenth century. In 1415, the year of Agincourt, Archbishop Chichele raised St George's Day to a great feast and ordered it to be observed like Christmas Day. In 1778 the holiday reverted to a simple day of devotion for English Catholics. The banner of St George, the red cross of a martyr on a white background, was adopted for the uniform of English soldiers possibly in the reign of Richard 1, and later became the flag of England and the White Ensign of the Royal Navy. In a seal of Lyme Regis dating from 1284 a ship is depicted bearing a flag with a cross on a plain background. The fame of St George throughout Europe was greatly increased by the publication of the Legenda Sanctorum  by James of Voragine in 1265.  It was this book which popularised the legend of George and the Dragon. The legend of St George and the dragon took on a new lease of life during the Counter Reformation. The discoveries in Africa, India and the Americas, in areas which maps had previously shown as populated by dragons, presented vast new fields for Church missionary endeavour, and St George was once again invoked as an example of danger faced and overcome for the good of the Church. Meanwhile, the author, John Bunyan (1628-88), recalled the story of George and the Dragon in the account of the fight between Christian and Apollyon in Pilgrim's Progress (1679 and 1684).

The legend may have been particularly well received in England because of a similar legend in Anglo-Saxon literature. St George became a stock figure in the secular miracle plays derived from pagan sources which continued to be performed at the beginning of spring. The origin of the legend remains obscure. It is first recorded in the late sixth century and may have been an allegory of the persecution of Diocletian, who was sometimes referred to as 'the dragon' in ancient texts. The story appears be a christianised version of the Greek legend of Perseus, who was said to have rescued the virgin Andromeda from a sea monster at Arsuf or Jaffa, near Lydda ,where the cult of St George grew up around the site of his supposed tomb.  In 1348, George was adopted by Edward III as principal Patron of his new order of chivalry, the Knights of the Garter. Some believe that the Order took its name from a pendant badge or jewel traditionally shown in depictions of Saint George. The insignia of the Order include a Collar and Badge Appendant, known as the George. The badge is of gold and presents a richly enamelled representation of St George on horseback slaying the dragon. A second medal, the Lesser George, also depicting George and the dragon, is worn attached to the Sash. The objective of the Order was probably to focus the efforts of England on further Crusades to reconquer the Holy Land. The earliest records of the Order of the Garter were destroyed by fire, but it is believed that either in 1348 or in 1344 Edward proclaimed St George Patron Saint of England. Although the cult of St George was suppressed in England at the Reformation, St George's Chapel, Windsor, completed in stages from 1483 to 1528, has remained the official seat of the Order, where its chapters assemble. The Monarch and the Prince of Wales are always members, together with 24 others and 26 Knights or Ladies Companion.

 

In 1940, when the civilian population of Britain was subjected to mass bombing by the Luftwaffe, King George V1 instituted the George Cross for 'acts of the greatest heroism or of the most conspicuous courage in circumstances of extreme danger'. The award, which is second only to the Victoria Cross, the highest military decoration, is usually given to civilians and can be given posthumously. The award consists of a silver cross. On one side is depicted St George slaying the dragon, with the inscription,'For Gallantry'; on the other appear the name of the holder and the date of the award. For lesser, but still outstanding acts of courage, the King created the George Medal. This also is a silver cross, with on one side the reigning monarch and on the other St George slaying the dragon. The island of Malta was awarded the George Cross for its heroism in resisting attack during World War 11.

St George continues to be venerated in the Church of England, by the Orthodox churches and by the Churches of the Near East and Ethiopia.He finds a place in Islamic Hagiography, that gives him the honoured title of "Prophet". The supposed tomb of St George can still be seen at Lod, south-east of Tel-Aviv; and a convent in Cairo preserves personal objects which are believed to have belonged to George. St George is still venerated in a large number of places, by followers of particular occupations and sufferers from certain diseases. George is the patron saint of Aragon, Catalonia, Georgia, Lithuania, Palestine, Portugal, Germany and Greece; and of Moscow, Istanbul, Genoa and Venice (second to St Mark). He is patron of soldiers, cavalry and chivalry; of farmers and field workers, Boy Scouts and butchers; of horses, riders and saddlers; and of sufferers from leprosy, plague and syphilis.

All down the centuries, one peculiarity of the English people, which has cost them dear. We have always thrown away after a victory the greater part of the advantages we had gained in the struggle. The worst difficulties from which we suffer do not come from without. They come from within. They do not come from the cottages of the wage earners; they come from a peculiar type of brainy people, always found in our country, who, if they add something to its culture, take much from its strength. Our difficulties come from the mood of unwarrantable self-abasement, into which we have been cast, by a powerful section of our own intellectuals. They come from the acceptance of defeatist doctrines by a large proportion of our politicians. But what have they to offer, but a vague internationalism, a squalid materialism, and the promise of impossible utopias? Nothing can save England if she will not save herself. If we lose faith in ourselves, in our capacity to guide and govern, if we lose our will to live, then indeed our story is told.

So shalt thou when morning comes
Rise to conquer or to fall,
Joyful hear the rolling drums,
Joyful hear the trumpets call,
Then let Memory tell thy heart:
“England! what thou wert, thou art!”
Gird thee with thine ancient might.


 

 

SONNET 33

 
 
Full many a glorious morning have I seen
Flatter the mountain-tops with sovereign eye,
Kissing with golden face the meadows green,
Gilding pale streams with heavenly alchemy;
Anon permit the basest clouds to ride
With ugly rack on his celestial face,
And from the forlorn world his visage hide,
Stealing unseen to west with this disgrace:
Even so my sun one early morn did shine
With all triumphant splendor on my brow;
But out, alack! he was but one hour mine;
The region cloud hath mask'd him from me now.
Yet him for this my love no whit disdaineth;
Suns of the world may stain when heaven's sun staineth.
 
 
William Shakespeare
 
Born April 23rd 1564 on St Georges Day - the Patron Saint of England
 
 
 

Take the day off work
on Wednesday 23 April 2008!

Celebrate St. George's Day!

 
 

DUMP THE JUNK

 

Today is one of those days when I despair of the world around me. Hopefully the local Museum will be saved and Cindy is right I do tend to bash the Americans with gay, [am I allowed to use that word?], abandon. I cannot remember any time, when in the last 40 years, I have been in agreement with the politicians of that country. This is a pity as most of the people I have met in Cyberspace are decent, hardworking Americans. The body politic in Washington DC appears to have lost touch with them as well as me! However, today my gripe is with China.

The torch relay IS a political gesture, who would think any differently? Only in London did it truly wave in the name of the Olympic ideal. Only in London were the police able to handle the crowds. In Paris, San Francisco, Rio de Janario, Islamabad and Delhi it was hidden from the public gaze. Which civil servant on which committee in Beijing decided the Olympic torch should circumnavigate the world?  If that country has the equivalent of a ‘salt mine in Siberia’ he should be sent there forthwith. He may be dismayed but it came as no surprise to me, that a month before the torch left Athens, the Mad Monks branch of the Lhasa Rentamob were out on that cities streets. Sending the torch on its journey was too good an opportunity for anti China protests. The question is not why it happened but who financed the insurrection?

History tells us that the state of Texas was dragged screaming into the Federation of United States of America, some 140 years ago. Some 800 years ago the Principality of Wales became part of the growing United Kingdom, following centuries of border wars with the English. It is as inconceivable for Texan and Welsh cessation from The USA and England respectively, as it is for Tibet to be divorced from Greater China.  Tibet has been part of China, longer than Normandy has been part of France!

Having said that and agreeing with the Chinese view that controlling mobs in Lhasa, intent on violence and destruction, is an internal affair, why are they supplying arms to Zimbabwe? A Chinese ship, the An Yue Jiang, containing a 77-tonne cargo – including  rounds of ammunition, AK47 assault rifles, mortars and rocket-propelled grenades arms destined for the landlocked Zimbabwe, has docked in South Africa. Irrespective of whether the arms are for the illegal Mugabe clique or for the rightfully elected government of that destitute country the sale of armaments is illegal and immoral. If China wants the respect of the world, forget the torch, just get this ship to sail to the deepest part of the Indian Ocean and dump its cargo.

'PEOPLE POWER' - MUSEUM UPDATE

 
'PEOPLE POWER' has forced foreign brewer to throw a lifeline to Burton's Museum of Brewing. Following the Burton Mail's 'Save Our Heritage' campaign and intervention from the town's MP, Janet Dean, Corrs have agreed to keep the artefacts and contents of the museum intact until the end of the year so that a rescue package can be put together.

It also been agreed that the famous Shire horses will not be sold.

News of the stay of execution was announced yesterday at a meeting between Coors, the MP, East Staffordshire Borough Council, Staffordshire County Council and the West Midlands branch of the Museums, Libraries and Archives group. The brewer has also agreed to hand over the museum - which will still close to the public at the end of June - to any organisation which would want to run it, and Coors will also donate a one-off funding payment up to £200,000 to any new owner.
 
 

http://www.burtonmail.co.uk/burtonmail-news-saveourheritage/DisplayArticle.asp?ID=299832

 

 

 


O Nightingale


O Nightingale that on yon bloomy Spray, 
Warbl'st at eve, when all the Woods are still 
Thou with fresh hope the Lover's heart dost fill, 
While the jolly hours lead on propitious May, 
Thy liquid notes that close the eye of Day, 
First heard before the shallow Cuckoo's bill 
Portend success in love; O if Jove's will 
Have linkt that amorous power to thy soft lay, 
Now timely sing, ere the rude Bird of Hate 
Foretell my hopeless doom in some Grove nigh: 
As thou from year to year hath sung too late 
For my relief; yet hadst no reason why, 
Whether the Muse, or Love call thee his mate, 
Both them I serve, and of their train am I.

by

 John Milton

1608 - 1674

A TALE OF TWO CITIES

 
In city A an ATM throws a wobbly and on inserting your card doles out £10, without charging your account. News gets around and soon a queue forms with people obtaining "free" £10 notes. Soon the machine is empty. The only red faces belong to the Bank.
In city B a card was inserted and dispenses 10 times that amount. Ask for 10 you get 100! A user walks away with  £1200! A friend withdraws £400. The friend has a conscience and returns the £400. The long arm of the law catches up with these two. The friend is imprisoned for 1 year, A user receives 5 years gets a fine of £100 and has to return the proceeds of his 'good fortune.'
 
Question: Which city has the correct moral answer to theft. A or B ?
 

GO HOME YANKS . . . . SAVE OUR MUSEUM

                                              

                                                                            THE COOPER - BURTON TOWN CENTRE The Cooper in cooper square, Burton

As many of you will have guessed I was not born in the area which I now call home. Nearby is BURTON UPON TRENT - which 100 years ago was the brewery capital of he WORLD. The techniques of the master brewers was so advanced that breweries around the world came to learn from these local journeymen.

I have taken the liberty of passing details of the petition to my blog friends, its not about drink its about the life and blood of a small provincial town. Its history - its heritage.

The monks of Burton Abbey, established circa 1002 AD, were the first to discover how peculiarly well-suited the local water was for the brewing of ales. Although it wasn't until centuries later that the chemical reasons for this suitablity were properly understood, the quality of the water drawn from Burton wells was to inspire an industry which would transform a sleepy Staffordshire backwater into the hub of an industry which would carry the name of the town to the four corners of the globe. Burton's fledgling brewing industry was boosted by the Trent Navigation Act of 1712, which made the river navigable for trade as far as Gainsborough in Lincolnshire, and later the arrival of the canals, and it was overseas where Burton ales first began to make a name for themselves, as local companies began to exploit a lucrative trade route to the Baltic ports and Russia, via Hull.

Bass's brewery alone, a single small brewery off Burton's High Street when William Bass inherited it in 1777, had in the space of one century been transformed into the largest ale brewery in the world, with three breweries in the town, a workforce of more than 2,500, and an output of nearly a million barrels a year by the late 1880's. That company's expansion owed much to the success of a new kind of ale, pale, sparkling and bitter, which became known as India Pale Ale because of it's popularity for export to India and other British colonies.

http://www.burtoncamra.org.uk/burton.html

In 2002, Coors yet another american company invading these shores, acquired the business of Bass Brewery.

They are now closing the only dedicated brewery museum in England.

The museum represents the history of the local people, akin to selling the liberty bell for scrap.

 

THOUSANDS SIGN UP TO SAVE THE TOWN'S BREWERY MUSEUM

by ANDY DONE-JOHNSON

BURTON MAIL

MORE than 5,500 people so far have signed the Burton Mail's campaign to Save Our Heritage, it has emerged. Online, around 2,100 protesters have put their names to the bid to prevent the Coors Visitor Centre from closing. Meanwhile, more than 3,000 residents in Burton and South Derbyshire have crowded into shops, pubs and off-licences to add their name to the call to secure charitable status for the former Bass Museum.

Additionally, a second protest group has now been set up on social networking site Facebook, while the original site - Save the Bass Museum - set up more than a fortnight ago, now has more than 1,230 members. The site has generated some furious debate among Burton residents - past and present - who are calling on Coors to rethink its late June closure date.

 

SAVE OUR HERITAGE FROM THE AMERICAN AXE

 

please sign the petition:

http://www.burtonmail.co.uk/burtonmail-news-saveourheritage/DisplayArticle.asp?ID=299832

 

BASS SHIRE HORSES. MUSEUM BURTON 

The shire horses, Brewery Museum, Burton.

bifteck de cheval à Paris?


 

RENTAMOB

 
 
I had finished watching the Premiership football match between Middlesbrough and Manchester United, a 2 - 2 draw by the way, which makes you wonder why Boro are not in the top half of the league. I flicked over for the weather forecast and caught the news.. . . . .I have always thought the BBC to be fairly impartial, that is until I saw their coverage of the Olympic flame being paraded through London. They seemed obsessed by showing  a few dissidents attempting to disrupt this NON POLITICAL occasion. In shot all the time were Chinese flags, this fact was not worthy of comment, whereas flags which they assumed to be Tibetean were mentioned with monotony. Upwards of 10,000 people lined the 31 mile route 50 were arrested. At one point a male caucasian [ ! ] 'bravely' attacked a female tv celebrity who was carrying the flame.
 
 I for one supported the MANCHESTER bid for the games some years ago, this effort was not given the support from south of the Trent so failed. Manchester organised the profitable and successful Commenwealth Games a couple of years ago, without all the razzamatazz that london needs for 2012. !
 
According to the Olympic Charter, established by Pierre de Coubertin, the goal of the Olympic Movement is to contribute to building a peaceful and better world by educating youth through sport practised without discrimination of any kind and in the Olympic spirit, which requires mutual understanding with a spirit of friendship, solidarity and fair play.
 
Being an economic power, China , in the view of some people, has a responsibility to help stop humanitarian crises and feel they are not doing so. Well I lost any interest in the Olympics in 1982, when USA introduced politics into the movement when it attempted a boycott of the Moscow Games. Why? Because the USSR had invaded AFGANISTAN. Stopping a humanitarian crisis among the Bin Laden lead Taliban was, it seems more important than the Olympic ideal.  Additionally the commercialisation of the Olympics and the uninhibited use of drugs has made it a NO NO in my book.
 
If today's demonstrators believe China has a responsibility to help stop humanitarian crises I feel sure they will support that country in full scale invasions of Zimbabwe, and North Korea. Will these self same demonstrators for human rights be picketing Windsor Castle this week demanding our aged Monarch cancels the 'celebration' dinner commemorating the 60 year old, daily, rape of PALASTINE ? 
 

WILL THEY SHOOT US

will they shoot us ?

 

Wow !

 
 
Woke up this morning and guess what?
 
Snow laying on the ground , a real winter wonderland out there 
 burying the daffodils and hiding all the other newly peeping shoots
 
 - In  APRIL ??

"Coffee in the morning,coffee in the evening coffee at supper time . . ."

 
 
 
good morning
 
Coffee may cut the risk of dementia by blocking the damage cholesterol can inflict on the body, research suggests.
 
 Caffeine is a safe and readily available drug and its ability to stabilise the blood brain barrier means it could have an important part to play in therapies against neurological disorders
Dr Jonathan Geiger

Yawn.....Yawn.....

 
 Well its spring and our clocks went forward one hour at the weekend. This morning I awoke just as one of my neighbours was leaving for work. I looked at the clock with bleary eyes, switched on the radio and slumped back still in that state of half sleep, half wakefulness. As I gained full consciousness I listened to an item regarding Finches. Apparently they overwinter here in England and then migrate back to Europe for the summer to breed. The changing climate has apparently interferred with this natural cycle. They are staying here longer than they should, in fact building nests for their young. This of course means they are feeding on insects and worms that our Blackbird and Thrush need for rearing their young. The authorities have decided therefore to capture the finches and transport them back to continental europe.  As I dragged myself fom the warmth of my duvet, the famous greenwich pips sounded the hour. It was 8 o' clock, Tuesday, April 1st.. . . . . ...