The lovely folks at 'Labour Hame', a Scottish Labour website, have published my article on whether Jeremy Corbyn could repeat the SNP's success across Britain.
Jeremy Corbyn fans repeatedly claim that SNP success was due to their anti-austerity stance, and if anti-austerity could produce a landslide in Scotland it could in England and Wales. I look at exactly why the SNP annihilated Labour in the General Election. Basically I emphasise that May 2015 this was the end of a decade of the SNP steadily kicking in Scottish Labour and that 2015 was just the final stage of this process. A process that was given an almighty push by the referendum but also included better leadership, tighter organisation, and lucky circumstances.
The very fact it was a complex process makes it unlikely Corbyn will be able to repeat the job in England. Anyway, here's the full article:
http://labourhame.com/could-jeremy-corbyn-repeat-the-snps-success-in-england/
Monday 24 August 2015
Friday 14 August 2015
I wrote to my MP about fighting ISIL
This morning I finally got round to doing something I had meant to do for a while: I wrote to my MP to encourage him to lobby the government to do whatever it could to oppose ISIL (/ISIS/Daesh/Islamic State) militarily or peacefully. Please write to you own MP or other representative and donate to a charity supporting innocent civilians in Iraq and Syria. If you want to feel free to borrow my words as the basis for your own letter or email.
"Dear Mr Pawsey,
"Dear Mr Pawsey,
I am writing to you as my MP because I have just read an
article detailing how ISIL are formally organising slavery as part of their
so-called 'state', and particularly the sex slavery of Yazidi women and girls,
including the rape of children. Nobody doubts these facts. These Nazis-in-robes
are without doubt carrying out the genocide and ethnic cleansing of Syrian and
Iraqi Christians and Yazidis with the utmost imaginable brutality and horror,
as well as the deadly persecution of homosexuals and other minorities. The
comparisons to the Holocaust are unavoidable, only the relative disorganisation
and poverty of ISIL stop them being a threat to tens of millions rather than
tens of thousands.
It seems utterly clear that there can be no diplomatic or
political solution to ISIL, as they are a fanatical death-cult with no aims
beyond the total subjugation and murder of anyone who is not an extremist Wahhabi
Sunni. I know that Britain is weary after Labour's appalling failed
intervention in Iraq, and the sense that every-time we intervene in these areas
it merely produces some worse horror. But I do not think there can be any worse
horror that ISIL: we already have genocide, mass organised sex slavery
including the rape of children, and ethnic cleansing. It cannot get any worse.
And I feel that when we invaded and occupied Iraq we became, to some degree,
continuingly responsible for what happens to the people there. We cannot stand
by while another Srebrenica, another Rwanda, occurs not so far away, if there
is anything more we can to stop it. What is the point of sending plane-loads of
our school-children all the way to Auschwitz in Poland to learn the lessons of
that dark time if we do not do everything in our power to stop it happening on
this very day on the borders of Europe? Northern Iraq in 2015 is not so much
farther away than Poland must have seemed in 1942. I think of the Yazidi women
raped and held as slaves, and I think of my mother and my wife and the young
women who are my friends and family . . .
I am not an expert in the military or in international aid,
so I do not know exactly what can be done.
But I beg you to do whatever you can as an MP to support and encourage
the Government do to whatever it can in Iraq or Syria. Whether that is
militarily or or in terms of peaceful aid and support, whether to destroy ISIL
directly or to help those groups there who are already fighting it, and to give
what material help we can to all those threatened by death, slavery, or being
forced to flee their ancient homeland.
Kind Regards,
Stephen Wigmore"
Friday 7 August 2015
Populations of Middle Earth - Lothlorien
A kind correspondent (Glen Klugkist of South Africa) pointed out that in my articles on the populations of Middle Earth at the time of Lord of the Rings I had missed out the magical realm of Lothlorien: home of Galadriel and Celeborn, and "the heart of Elvendom on Earth".
I reproduce our thoughts on this below: basically we agreed that the population of Lothlorien would be similar to that of the northern Elven kingdom of Mirkwood.
I reproduce our thoughts on this below: basically we agreed that the population of Lothlorien would be similar to that of the northern Elven kingdom of Mirkwood.
"Hi Stephen
I do not know if I missed an article of yours on Lothlorien, but would like to ask your view on its population:
In one of your articles you estimate the population of Thranduil's kingdom in Northern Mirkwood at the time of the War of the Ring, at roughly 30 000 Elves, if I understand correctly.
Do you think Lorien fell into the same population category, seeing that it was also a woodland realm?
My own first estimate for Lothlorien was in the region of 17 000 to 20 000 Elves, but looking at the surface area of Lothlorien and the fact that Galadriel's forces seemed to have total control of the entire forest from its borders inward, I revisited my estimate and came to new but still very rough estimate for Lothlorien's population of 36 000 - 40 000 Elves. Do you think thats way off?"
Kind Regards,
Glen Kuglist"
"Dear Glen,
I'm ashamed to say that I seem to have missed Lothlorien out of my estimates. I covered Eriador and The southern lands, and then the lands of the Hobbit, but Lothlorien is the one sizeable population that doesn't fall into any of these categories.
I would concur that the best guess for Lothlorien's population would be around the 30,000 that I estimated for Thrandruil's realm. It has a very similar history and role in Lord of the Rings. Both are recorded as having sent out 'Armies', in both the 2nd Age to the War of the Last Alliance and right up to and including the War of the Ring.
We can tell Lothlorien's size quite easily, it is about 30 miles by 50 miles (thanks as always to the Atlas of Middle Earth by Karen Fonstad). We can't make any comparison in that regard to Thrandruil's kingdom because it was never clear what area the Elves controlled or inhabited in northern Mirkwood. We know of one significant town or 'city' for both (Caras Galadhon and the Elven King's Halls) and a reasonable degree of organisation.
It seems Rhovanion 'kingdoms' were very low population compared to Gondor or Rohan. But still given Lothlorien's ability to maintain their borders against threats from both Mirkwood and Moria (even given the power of Galadriel's ring), and even to send out armies to invade Dol Guldor, I don't think a population of much less than 30,000 is credible. To give a range I would estimate 20,000-30,000 Elves.
We can't be more precise than that I fear.
Kind Regards,
Stephen Wigmore"
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Tolkien
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