Casey’s Blog

Mostly Internal Communications & Food

January Commuting (Or Lack Of)

Writing about: http://nationalrail.co.uk/service_bulletins/2fbb279e0a04000200df9a4c7e1c3e28.html

HitchingAs a non-driver, today I am effectively stranded at home for the second day this week. Yesterday I worked from home and spent the day ridden with guilt at my self-perceived lack of productivity. Clearly going to have to work on that…

Today I have taken ther easier option and am taking the day off and trying hard to resist the urge to check my work email. Easier said than done especially now I’m online – I should go and work on reducing the post-xmas laundry pile instead.

The other option is hitchhiking in the snow (which admittedly has not yet started but is due to start within 2 hours).

National Rail are promising that everything will be back to normal by 05:00 tomorrow, we’ll see!

I remember the lovely Peter Wagstaff teaching us all about Paris being the transport hub of l’Hexagone and thinking how ridiculous it was to route everything through one single spot. Little did I know that we in the UK had made Rugby of all places our Achilles’ Heel.

Which reminds me, apparently there is a Bath reunion afoot. I’m feeling very wary and am unwilling to commit.

Filed under: Driving Lessons, France, Guilt, Higher Education, New Year, The Drawer, Weather, Work

La Haine Recommence

Writing about Commentary on French riots from Neighbourhood #1

Watching More 4 news last night we saw an interview with Naima Bouteldja

Sarah
Smith was asking her whether British-style hate crime and race crime
legislation would have helped to prevent the build up of illfeeling
which has in part led to the recent rioting.

Naima Bouteldja’s first response was an emphatic no.

At
which point I’m ashamed to say that we stopped listening and started
discussing it thus missing most of the rest of the interview.

In short though we covered two points:

How
can you have a self proclaimed secular society that believes in
Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité and then protect certain groups?

  1. It’s an acknowledgement that you aren’t any of those things
  2. How can you protect some groups and not others eithout destroying the egalité?

When we picked the interview back up she seemed to be saying
that the main sparking point was the way that the Government, and
Dominic de Villepin in particular, had dealt with the initial incident
and then the way that the CRS had managed the subsequent civil unrest.

Quote from Naima Bouteldja’s Guardian article:

Four
days after the deaths in Clichy-sous-Bois, just as community leaders
were beginning to calm the situation, the security forces reignited the
fire by emptying teargas canisters inside a mosque. The official reason
for the police action: a badly parked car in front of it. The
government refuses to offer any apology to the Muslim community.

Now, I find the majority of French policemen quite scary – but the CRS are a different matter altogether. They’re more akin to the Russian “FSB” – and those guys are really scary.

Compagnie Républicaine de Sécurité

Definition from Anthony’s Home Page
Anthony’s Home Page

The average person in France associates the abbreviation CRS with riot police, demonstrations, and other public scenes of disorder, mainly because the CRS
is the unit of the regular police that is normally detailed with this
type of crowd control. (They also perform duties such as rescue
operations and the like, but those activities don’t get much media
coverage.) They have a widespread but undeservedly sinister reputation,
probably thanks to guilt via association, since they are usually seen
publicly only in tense situations, such as public demonstrations,
riots, and the like. While the media give considerable attention to the
occasional instances of police brutality, in many cases the CRS
end up more beat up than the crowds they are attempting to
control—which is especially significant when you consider how well
protected the CRS usually are.

Closer to home Professor Danielle Joly has posted an Expert Opinion on the Mediablog.

…and actually – who are we to be so smug?

How is this any different from St. Pauls, Toxteth, Broadwater Farm and Brixton in the 1980s?

Or more recently Lozells?

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Filed under: Economics, France, Media, Politics

Autumn Days

My favourite hymn at primary school – Autumn Days by Estelle White:

Autumn days, when the grass is jewelled
And the silk in a chestnut shell
Jet planes meeting in the air to be refuelled
All these things I love so well

(Chorus)

So I mustn’t forget
No, I mustn’t forget
To say a great big thank you
No, I mustn’t forget.

Clouds that look like familiar faces
And winter’s moon with frosted rings
Smell of bacon as I fasten up my laces
And the milkman sings.

Whipped–up spray that is rainbow–scattered
And a swallow curving in the sky
Shoes go comfy though they’re worn out and they’re battered
And the taste of apple pie.

Scent of gardens when the rain’s been falling
And a minnow darting down a stream
Picked–up engine that’s been stuttering and stalling
And a win for my home team.

Autumn
is my favourite season and I was feeling particuarlly autumnal this
weekend because we went to the farmers’ market in Stratford and stocked
up on all kinds of seasonal local goodies including:

  • bags and bags of apples
  • a saddle of venison*
  • pork and apple sausages
  • an entire carrier bag of veg (cabbage, french beans, celeriac) for a bargain £2
  • gorgeous fresh bread

Then, last night I made Toad in the Hole with onion gravy. …and even though I say so myself, it was spanking.

And
yesterday lunchtime we went to the French market in Leamington and had
tartiflette and cassoulet for lunch folowed by crepes.

The market is from Brittanny so there are loads of Produit de Bretagne–marked goods including excellent cider.

Which reminded us that we really ought to organise a shopping visit to France for before Christmas. Always on the list are:

  • Lentilles preparés
  • Creme de cassis etc. for kirs
  • Raclette
  • Magrets de canard
  • Pont L’Eveque
  • Munster
  • Cassoulet
  • Haricots verts
  • Saucissons de Toulouse
  • Harrissa
  • Merguez
  • Gewurtztraminer
  • Tartes flambées
  • Cremant
  • Cahors

*I’ve made a damson and red wine sauce for the venison,
but I am going to have to clean the oven – by the time I’d finished the
Toad it was smoking like a bastard.

AUTUMN TREES IMAGE COURTESY OF MY GARDEN

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Filed under: Food, France, Music, School, Warwickshire

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