The Bible says, an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth…

But have those paragraphs been rewritten recently as, an Israeli eye for 3,000 Muslim eyes…

Apparently, the Arab rockets into Israel have killed only 20 people in eight years. And the recent escalation by Hamas has been miniscule in comparison with the current Israeli retaliation. But a latest Arab death toll is verging on 3,000, compared with one Israeli dead. (ed.Also See- this article)

Why should a Welsh web-site bother with penning an observation ?

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The best way to review the year, we feel, is to look back at the articles that we have considered as ‘stuff worth reading’. We have listed these below and recommend that they be revisited as they are indeed worth reading and give a good idea of the hot topics of 2008.

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Banking DinosaursIt may not seem so to the hysterical Media, but people actually still have confidence in Banks. We are all still depositing cash, cheques and are still using ATMs, debit, credit cards and online banking. What we don’t have, is confidence in the banking systems, the stock market and the systems of credit brokering/exchange that are now manifestly broken.

The Financial System, in the spirit of Barack Obama, needs ‘Change’.

Money itself will still remain at the core of every society whether we like it or not but the system that distributes money, stores and manages wealth has seized up. It needs to evolve and become a necessary lubricant of society not a poison.

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Iain Dale is running a survey of opinion on UK politicians – who has been the best and worst in 2008. If you have a few moments to spare go and have a look and vote… HERE

For what it’s worth I voted:

Politician of the Year – Gordon Brown

Why? Because GB epitomises everything we have now come to expect about politicians.  They used to call  Le Grand Nautonnier Blair ‘Teflon’ Tony because shit would slide off him. Shit is attracted to and sticks to GB  but it doesn’t seem to make any difference- he thrives on it like some kind of alien fungus. There we are then it is the post-modern, post-industrial post-sanitary ironic World we live in.

There are lots of other categories to vote for like best MP, best minister, worst political gaffe etc etc.

Predictions for 2009

  1. Vince Cable will replace Clegg in Feb
  2. General election end of May
  3. Tories destroyed by ‘do nothing’ and ‘Eton Toff’ slurs
  4. Rhodri Morgan goes on holiday again
  5. Onerous legal restrictions on blogging introduced..more
  6. Plaid get new leader – Adam Price
  7. EU convergence funds ‘get lost’ in financial crisis … more
  8. WAG struggles to pass its second piece of devolved legislation
  9. The entire Welsh economy enters negative equity
  10. Wales win the Grand Slam! (again)!

Nadolig Llawen a Blwyddyn Newydd Dda.

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The Western Mail has really excelled itself in its campaign to rid the Welsh Tory party of its leader who has done so much to turn the party into an organisation which supports the nation instead of looking solely towards England and copying what happens across the border.

The basis of the campaign was revealed when the paper gave an entire page to the two most anti-Assembly members who are – or have ever been – in its ranks.

One of these enemies of the Assembly – some would say, enemies of Wales – was named. The Mail - some would say Llais y Sais after reading former Mail editor John Humphries’s Freedom Fighters (from University of Wales Press) – repeated an interview with the notorious former AM for Clwyd West.

As expected, Rod Richards spat vitriol. He additionally ridiculed Nick Bourne’s attempts to learn Welsh – which was the reason for buying on expenses the iPod which the Western Mail has waxed so eloquently about.

I don’t like to say it, but Mr Richards’s comparison of Mr Bourne with the admitted spoken successes of David Davies smack of the perhaps-unwitted arrogance of a person who learnt Welsh from both parents without effort.

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The Assembly – and in particular Ieuan Wyn Jones, transport minister and deputy to Rhodri Morgan – will soon be presented with an opportunity to make a mark which will last  a half-century or more.

Alternatively, the institution, its ministers and its civil servants could bust their chances through short-sightedness, inability to plan, and failure to innovate.

The gossip has been heard around Cardiff Bay for about a month. But this week an  apparently well-founded press leak has gone far to turn this gossip into fact.

The railway line between Swansea and Paddington is to be electrified. Current plans are to make an announcement early in the new year, with the intention of starting work in 2012.

According to the magazine Today’s Railways UK, the work would be done in five years – or even in three.

Now, this will of course be a London scheme, bringing nearer to completion long-term talk of electrifying all the main lines from the English capital.

Which only goes to emphasise the London-centredness from which the rest of Britain suffers.

But once the electric wires reach Cardiff, the situation changes dramatically for Wales. For some years, work was under way under the old South Glamorgan County Council to electrify the suburban railway system around Cardiff.

After the county was converted into two unitary authorities, it seems the professional engineering working on the project was quietly disbanded – at least partly because of the disruption which accompanies any such major organisational changes.

The idea at the time was linked to talk of running trams to Cardiff Bay. To this day, the precise routes which these tramlines would follow are carefully safeguarded by planners.

But a decade or more later, the transport situation  in the South has changed somewhat. At that time, one of the reason for trams was to get rid of the ugly Bute Street railway embankment.

Now, traffic is growing so much on the Valleys railways that all the talk is of expansion. Platforms are being expanded to take six-car trains; the line to Ebbw Vale has reopened; the next plan surely will be the reopening of the Beddau link at Llantrisant.

Cardiff now is rapidly developing a metro system the equal of the best in the British Isles and the equal of those on the Continent.

A metro system is typified by frequent services (preferably every 15 minutes); stations which are close together; good links to bus services (OK, that’s still to happen in a worthwhile way).

Indeed, trains on a metro take the place of buses on our jam-packed roads.

In Rhondda, almost every village has its station (which means, collecting all the fares is a tough job for the guard !). On the Coryton branch, some stations are within walking distance of each other.

All right, the Ebbw Vale line is a failure from the point of view – a number of the stations closed by Dr Beeching have inexcusably failed to reopen.

All that is obviously wrong with the Valleys system is the trains. Most of the coaches have only two axles; the last time two-axle coaches were common on the valleys, it was the 19th century, and the coaches were swiftly relegated to use on colliers’ work trains.

New trains are needed in the Valleys.

Now, it so happens that one of the main reasons for the Paddington electrification is that the high-speed trains (HSTs) have to be replaced.

The question must then be raised as to whether we get heavy-weight electric trains, as used around London, or whether we adopt systems pioneered some years ago in Germany allowing the new trains to double up as trams and enter town centres (as well as Cardiff Bay…).

This will be a big project. It will mean an enormous amount of work be all levels in the Assembly. Fortunately, the minister is a friend of the railways…

And if we are thinking in coalition terms, this would be a true coalition project.  For the person who first spoke of a Cardiff metro was Sue Essex, the Cardiff North Labour AM, and subsequent transport minister.

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I’m sorry, but this blog sends no message of merry Christmas to the scouts and guides of Wales.

A couple of days ago I slated them for their monoglot English publicity for their Christmas post service.

Their ignoring of the Welsh language was totally inexcusable – and so different from the status (inadequate though it often is) that other voluntary organisations afford the Welsh language.

At the time, I thought the entire service was run centrally, from HQ in east London. In other words, same publicity posters everywhere.

But I’ve just received two cards through this service, one from the Caerffili service, and the other from Cardiff and the Vale.

To my surprise, the stamp which each card carried was radically different. Even the number of words carried was different. All in English, of course.

So the argument about centralism is not true. Which makes it even more obvious that the scout is a propaganda organisation for the English and for England itself.

What is the legend carried on stamps issued in Caernarfon and Aberystwyth ? Or Llanelli ? English, you can be sure.

I only hope someone can prove me wrong. But I don’t think so.

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Is the Western Mail’s highly-unusual over-the-top call for Nick Bourne to resign as Tory leader the final service that paper can render to eccentric right-wing Monmouth MP David Davies and his father Peter, a Newport councillor ?

The leader the next day on the paper’s own-styled “IPodGate day six” descends to hysteria as if the paper is belatedly realising that its 140-year-old campaign to save Wales for unadulterated unionism is going down the pan.

Unfortunately for Llais y Sais (the epithet we are led to bestow by former editor John Humphries in his recent Freedom Fighters, from University of Wales Press, as well as by Aled Jones in his Press, Politics and Society, same publisher), Mr Bourne can guess with ease where the campaign rises from.

The link between the Mail and the tiny Newport clique is too well known. The Tories are too much gentlemen to name the people they are referring to. But they fully realise there’s much truth in their allegations about a two-way flow of information between what’s left of Thomson House (not much) and almost the only source of Tory information  which that place seemed to believe exists.

Any comments on what Mr Bourne gets up to have to be read in the light of the statement that the position he has taken of advocating a Scots-style parliament for Wales has “earned him plenty of enemies”  within the Welsh party.  That’s a recent comment from one of the Llais’s journalists whose words are of value – London political editor Tomos Livingstone in The Guardian (although I thought he was still with the Mule…).

The Mail decided to stick its neck out with a page-one editorial this week calling for Mr Bourne to go. Usually, of course, this space is allocated to the main news story of the day.

Were it not that the story of Mr Bourne’s expenses was also running on the BBC, one would dismiss the originating story as standard newspaper hyperbole. Indeed, precisely because is was also running on the BBC one could still dismiss it accordingly – remember the ridiculous BBC-generated furore over the totally-unscripted remarks on a light-hearted BBC programme by another Tory AM, Alun Cairns, about Italians.

But expanding the story into a page-one editorial creates the smell of the Mail - Llais y Sais of old, we must remember -  doing its utmost to gain a political scalp from Cardiff Bay.

And all over a claim for £229 which the Assembly fees office was totally willing to pay. Admittedly, the claim was for an iPod – which every Western Mail reader would know is usually bought to listen to pop music. Does the Mail indeed possess nowadays any readers who listen to anything but pop music ?

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Cambria Books

New publication.
Important contribution to our knowledge of the Arab Spring by Denis Campbell.

Cambria Books

New publication. Entertaining guide to the US Elections by Denis Campbell.
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