This from the Guardian in October 2024. Children are being “plunged into poverty”, a charity says, because of a lack of support for kinship carers – relatives or family friends who step in to look after children after a crisis. Kinship carers, who are often grandparents, are twice as likely as other adults to rely... Continue Reading →
Polar bears, the Treaty of Westphalia (1648), Private Eye and Banx. And #climate meltdown, obvs
First, the cartoon. The cartoonist is Banx, who for my money is one of the best in the UK. His work appears in (at least) the Financial Times and Private Eye (these two are indispensable for understanding what is going on in the UK, as is the Morning Star. None of the three should be... Continue Reading →
Big wheel keep on turning – of parents, Larkin and clear water
Two particular Cultural Artefacts bumped together in my head just now, and I realised they are the same thing. Item the first - "This be the verse" by Philip Larkin. It's the one that begins "They fuck you up, your mum and dad". Get beyond that, and there's dark despairing wisdom (my favourite kind, obvs).... Continue Reading →
Cartoons, catastrophe and the “long” view (even a generation seems as much as we can cope with)
Jotting a note to self for future possible work. I love old cartoons that talk about the ecological crisis - back to Pogo in 1971 "we have met the enemy and he is us" but also others from the same period. They remind me that the stakes have been known since the time I was... Continue Reading →
Cornucupians are structurally lucky in arguments
I should be working (1). Anyway, I am sure some of the readers (singular? plural?) of this blog will have had the experience of trying to explain that there are in fact limits - ecological, social, cognitive, physical, to someone who just denies it all and says, oh, you know the drill "limitless capacity for... Continue Reading →
Paleolithic emotions, medieval institutions, godlike technology – what could possibly go wrong?
The real problem of humanity is the following: We have Paleolithic emotions, medieval institutions and godlike technology. And it is terrifically dangerous. E.O. Wilson Am so in love with this quote. Yes, yes, the dangers of mystifying class relations by harkening back to our hominid ancestry. Blah blah 'it's not the anthropocene, it's the capitolocene' blah blah.... Continue Reading →
Cortisol, long-term stress (versus “one and done”) and brain architecture
On Saturday, at a wedding, talking - as you do - about cortisol levels in people in long-term stressful situations and brain architecture. Pushback from a none-too-bright ideologue (no, seriously) who tried to evade questions about their position/experience (always a sign, that), and had some, ah, odd, ideas about how fear and negative stimuli work... Continue Reading →
“COP This!” – Climate activist publication from December 2000 abt COP-6 at The Hague
Just a nice bit of history, from a generation ago.... Can't say we didn't know...
Metaphors for thinking about power: the tug of war
You can come up with all the elaborate diagrams and schema you like for thinking and talking about power. They'll definitely be read by reviewers one and two (it is always reviewer two, innit?). And once it's published in some paywalled journal it will be read by, ooh, a dozen or so other people. World-changing.... Continue Reading →
Post-mortems that are deadening…
We're now at the stage where "movement" "intellectuals" are willing to say in public what anyone with two brain cells (#NotAllMovementIntellectuals) has known for years - that the GretaXR 'wave' of climate concern is well and truly dead. And since we're talking about the Last Great British Wail, let's quote Lou Read - "Stick a... Continue Reading →