NEARLY THE GOAT
A Christmas Show from Riding Lights Theatre Company. Is it coming to a venue near you?
What a lot of fuss over the word sin – after all, we’re all guilty of it ……
Iain Duncan Smith lets his secular mask slip
Duncan Smith’s ‘sin’ remark over welfare changes reveals the religious underpinning of his politics
Iain Duncan Smith: his reference to sin on the Today programme revealed how religion underpins his politics. Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images
One almost missed it. Just as Iain Duncan Smith was finishing a detailed interview with James Naughtie on his welfare reforms on the Today programme, he used the infamous three-letter word. “That’s a sin,” he said. This is a word normally strictly reserved for Thought for the Day; few, if any, frontbench politicians in British politics are prepared to invoke such a theological category. Let alone use the term in an already highly charged debate on the kind of language being used by the coalition government to describe benefit recipients.
It’s not actually that clear what Iain Duncan Smith was referring to as sinful. The work and pensions secretary was talking about the fact that one in five households in the UK have been without work during a long economic boom; he went on to say that 70% of the jobs created have been taken by foreigners because 4.5 million unemployed were not able to or capable of taking them. “That’s a sin,” he concluded.
What is sinful? The fact that foreigners have taken most of the jobs? Or the fact that 4.5 million are not taking the jobs? Or is it the benefit recipients themselves? It wasn’t clear.
Standing back from the textual analysis of what he meant to say, there are two bigger points to make. First, that just using the word “sin” in the context of this issue is fanning the flames of an already testy debate. In the last week, there have been plenty of references to “workshy” people and “scroungers”, and that follows the infamous Osborne remark earlier in the autumn about “lifestyle choices”. Sin fits all too neatly into this narrative of blame and judgment, and for many critics of the coalition government, Duncan Smith will not be given the benefit of the doubt for his choice of words. It will help reverse Cameron’s work in detoxifying the Tory brand, reviving the stereotype of the nasty party, now with an added sinister religious edge. It was a very unnecessary own goal.
But the second point is more important in the longer term. Iain Duncan Smith is a Catholic and many of his key associates are deeply Christian, including Phillippa Stroud, his special adviser, and Tim Montgomerie, the fellow-founder of Duncan Smith’s Centre for Social Justice. Duncan Smith has admitted that his Catholicism “is integral to everything I do” and argues that the “organisations I see on the ground doing arguably the best work are often religious organisations”.
By and large, he has been adept at keeping that faith relatively private and taken care to explain his policies in terms more acceptable to the increasingly secular world of British political life. His interview on the Today programme demonstrated precisely this; he almost managed to keep his religious faith out of it – which cannot be easy for him, because he has expanded at length in an interview with religious media on his beliefs that many of the problems of poverty have a “spiritual base”. Instead, he used terms such as “rational choice” to apply to benefit recipients living on welfare and the “contract” that the state has with them.
But just when the interview was about to wrap up, it slipped out – the theological framework that underpins everything Duncan Smith does as a politician.
Android brother or something darker?
My brother’s an Android. Not a user just an Android!! Does he see me as some kind of hooded devil worshipper I wonder?
Exercise could be the death of you
A prison exercise area was described as an “execution yard” in a handbook for Russian inmates, inspectors said yesterday.
The translation error in the information booklet for Russian-speaking prisoners at Lincoln Prison was highlighted by inspectors after an unannounced visit in May.
Inspectors suggested checking the accuracy of any translations in the future.
The report, published by the Chief Inspector of Prisons, Nick Hardwick, said: “Staff were concerned that some translations were not entirely accurate, one example being a Russian handbook which had translated ‘exercise yard’ as ‘execution yard’.”
The report added that, in future, “the accuracy of translated material should be verified”.
Rough justice if you’re Russian
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There’s a bug in my system
I worked on my laptop in the dining room last week. Two of us created teaching materials for our church groups. I saved the drafts and put them out of my mind until this morning.
My morning reading sounds like a setting for a MMORPG. There’s even a promise of two more levels at the end.
Revelation 9.1-12
9 –>And the fifth angel blew his trumpet, and I saw a star that had fallen from heaven to earth, and he was given the key to the shaft of the bottomless pit;2 –>he opened the shaft of the bottomless pit, and from the shaft rose smoke like the smoke of a great furnace, and the sun and the air were darkened with the smoke from the shaft.3 –>Then from the smoke came locusts on the earth, and they were given authority like the authority of scorpions of the earth.4 –>They were told not to damage the grass of the earth or any green growth or any tree, but only those people who do not have the seal of God on their foreheads.5 –>They were allowed to torture them for five months, but not to kill them, and their torture was like the torture of a scorpion when it stings someone.6 –>And in those days people will seek death but will not find it; they will long to die, but death will flee from them.
7 –>In appearance the locusts were like horses equipped for battle. On their heads were what looked like crowns of gold; their faces were like human faces,8 –>their hair like women???s hair, and their teeth like lions??? teeth;9 –>they had scales like iron breastplates, and the noise of their wings was like the noise of many chariots with horses rushing into battle.10 –>They have tails like scorpions, with stings, and in their tails is their power to harm people for five months.11 –>They have as king over them the angel of the bottomless pit; his name in Hebrew is Abaddon,Destruction+e –> and in Greek he is called Apollyon.Destroyer+e –>
12 –>The first woe has passed. There are still two woes to come.
The day Steve Jobs dissed me in a keynote
The day Steve Jobs dissed me in a keynote
In May 2003, Apple invited me to their headquarters to discuss getting CD Baby‘s catalog into the iTunes Music Store.
iTunes had just launched two weeks before, with only some music from the major labels. Many of us in the music biz were not sure this idea was going to work. Especially those who had seen companies like eMusic do this exact same model for years without big success.
I flew to Cupertino thinking I’d be meeting with one of their marketing or tech people. When I arrived, I found out that about a hundred people from small record labels and distributors had also been invited.
We all went into a little presentation room, not knowing what to expect.
Then out comes Steve Jobs. Whoa! Wow.
Read the article in full – it’s downhill from here
Which just goes to show how big corporations live in a different world to small companies – they don’t even speak the same language or use the same currency. Small business live on their wits and their cashflow – big ones like Apple carve out their progress like a supertanker – and supertankers are not known for being able to sidestep a small dingy – sadly it has to be the dingy owner who gives way.
How does this work?
I’m having a clear out and I’ve just found this old slide rule. Strangely it was sold by Boots the Chemists in a range called Ringplan. Now – can I remember how to use it?

Iain Duncan Smith: his reference to sin on the Today programme revealed how religion underpins his politics. Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images


